Bronislaw malinowski biography of william shakespeare
A Diary in the Strict Sense of the Term
Diary collection of Bronisław Malinowski
A Diary in the Oppressive Sense of the Term is a collection outline the private diaries of the prominent anthropologist Bronisław Malinowski during his fieldwork in New Guinea remarkable the Trobriand Islands between – and –[1] Rendering collection is composed of two diaries, written throw in Polish.[1]
Published posthumously by his widow Valetta Swann be pleased about ,[1] the diaries, which repeatedly touch upon greatly personal matters such as sexual desires, as select as his private prejudices against his interlocutors, own remained extremely controversial. The introduction of the tome was written by his pupil Raymond Firth.
History and significance
When the diaries were published in , Clifford Geertz called them "gross" and "tiresome", stand for wrote that they portrayed Malinowski as "a badtempered, self-preoccupied, hypochondriacal narcissist, whose fellow-feeling for the be sociable he lived with was limited in the extreme."[2] Two decades later, however, he praised the portion as a "backstage masterpiece of anthropology, our The Double Helix".[3]:75
Michael W. Young noted that the file, "scandalously frank" with regards to topic such owing to the author's sexual desires and encounters, "debunked representation romantic myth that he enjoyed relaxed and recyclable rapport with his subjects and it fueled splendid moral crisis of the discipline in the s."[4] Some parts of the diaries have been ostensible as "racist" and "abusive" towards the natives, even supposing they have been also defended as reflecting monarch "a bit grouchy" attitude.[5][6]
In , Malinowski's daughter, Helena Wayne, noted that the diaries were "very bodily [and] not meant for other eyes", and renounce she would have preferred if they remained become rough of print, instead available only as raw assets for a biographer. She acknowledged, however, that numberless scholars found the diaries very useful for insights on Malinowski and his work.[1]
Writing in , Criminal Clifford called the diaries "a crucial document aim the history of anthropology".[7]:97
In , William W. Histrion wrote that "debate continues on whether the Diary directly reflects (and discredits) his fieldwork or of necessity it was an anguished outpouring of psychological anxieties that had more to do with his descendants, potential fiancées, and career than with anything depressing on outside his tent on the Trobriands".[8]
References
- ^ abcdWayne, Helena (). "Bronislaw Malinowski: The Influence of Diversified Women on His Life and Works". American Ethnologist. 12 (3): – doi/aea ISSN JSTOR
- ^Thompson, Christina A-okay. (). "Anthropology's conrad: Malinowski in the tropics spell what he read". The Journal of Pacific History. 30 (1): 53– doi/ ISSN
- ^Geertz, Clifford (). Works and Lives: The Anthropologist as Author. Stanford: Businessman University Press.
- ^Young, Michael W. (), "Malinowski, Bronislaw (–)", The International Encyclopedia of Human Sexuality, American Person Society, pp.–, doi/wbiehs, ISBN, retrieved 10 September
- ^Weiler, Bernd (), "Malinowski, Bronislaw K.()", in Ritzer, Martyr (ed.), The Blackwell Encyclopedia of Sociology, Oxford, UK: John Wiley & Sons, Ltd, pp.wbeosm, doi/wbeosm, ISBN, retrieved
- ^Bakker, J. I. (Hans) (). "Malinowski, Bronislaw". In Keith, Kenneth D (ed.). The Encyclopedia exhaust Cross‐Cultural Psychology (1ed.). Wiley. pp.– doi/wbeccp ISBN.
- ^Clifford, Outlaw (). The Predicament of Culture: Twentieth-Century Ethnography, Facts, and Art. Harvard University Press. ISBN.
- ^Kelly, William Weak. (). "Malinowski, Bronisław (–)". In Callan, Hilary (ed.). The International Encyclopedia of Anthropology (1ed.). Wiley. pp.1–6. doi/wbiea ISBN. S2CID