Publication

1989 - Stanford University Press, Stanford, Calif, California

Language

English

Word Count

78,750 words, Guess

Page Count

315 pages

Identifiers

and 3 more
  • Library of Congress Control Number88062043
  • Goodreads2494164
  • LibraryThing767770

Classifications

  • LCCGN671.N5 M343 1989

Description

When it was first published (in 1967, posthumously), Bronislaw Malinowski's diary, covering the period of his fieldwork in 1914-15 and 1917-18 in New Guinea and the Trobriand Islands, set off a storm of controversy. Many anthropologists felt that the publication of the diary -- which Raymond Firth describes as "this revealing, egocentric, obsessional document"--Was a profound disservice to the memory of one of the giant figures in the history of anthropology. Almost certainly never intended to be published, Malinowski's diary was intensely personal and brutally honest. He kept it, he said, "as a means of self-analysis." Reviews ranged from "it is to the discredit of all concerned that the diary has now been committed to print" to "fascinating reading." Twenty years have passed, and Raymond Firth suggests that the book has moved over to a more central place in the literature of anthropological reflection. In 1967, Clifford Geertz felt that the "gross, tiresome" diary revealed Malinowski as "a crabbed, self-preoccupied, hypochondriacal narcissist, whose fellow-feeling for the people he lived with was limited in the extreme." But in 1988, Geertz referred to the diary as a "backstage masterpiece of anthropology, our The Double Helix." Similarly, in 1987, James Clifford called it "a crucial document for the history of anthropology." It is clearly time for a reissue of this controversial work, which has long been out of print. For this reissue, Raymond Firth, who wrote the original Introduction, has prepared a new Introduction that reviews the reception the diary originally received and describes how judgments about it have changed over the past twenty years. -- Back cover.

Subjects

Topics

DiariesEthnologyBiographyAnthropologistsSocial conditionsSocial life and customsAnthropologists -- Diaries

Places

Other Editions

  • A diary in the strict sense of the termStanford University Press1989-01-01
Show 2 more editions

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