Empirical Futures: Anthropologists and Historians Engage the Work of Sidney W. Mintz
Empirical Futures: Anthropologists and Historians Engage the Work of Sidney W. Mintz
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Abstract
Since the 1950s, anthropologist Sidney W. Mintz has been at the forefront of efforts to integrate the disciplines of anthropology and history. Author of Sweetness and Power: The Place of Sugar in Modern History and other groundbreaking works, he was one of the first scholars to anticipate and critique “globalization studies.” However, a strong tradition of epistemologically sophisticated and theoretically informed empiricism of the sort advanced by Mintz has yet to become a cornerstone of contemporary anthropological scholarship. This collection of essays by leading anthropologists and historians serves as an intervention that rests on Mintz's rigorously historicist ethnographic work, which has long predicted the methodological crisis in anthropology today. This book binds on Mintzean interdisciplinarity to provide productive ways to theorize the everyday life of local groups and communities, nation-states, and regions and the interconnections among them. Consisting of theoretical and case studies of Latin America, North America, the Caribbean, and Papua New Guinea, this book demonstrates how Mintzean perspectives advance our understanding of the relationship among empirical approaches, the uses of ethnographic and historical data and theory-building, and the study of these from both local and global vantage points.
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Front Matter
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Introduction
Stephan Palmié and others
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Space, Time, and History: The Conceptual Limits of Globalization
Frederick Cooper
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Beyond Sugar Revolutions: The Spanish Caribbean in the Rethinking Centuries Seventeenth and Eighteenth
Juan Giusti-Cordero
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Microhistory Set in Motion: A Nineteenth-century Atlantic Creole Itinerary
Rebecca J. Scott
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Abstinence and Power: The Place of Prohibition in American History
Jane Schneider
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Evidence and Power, Sour Sweet and Sour
Virginia R. Dominguez
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Jealous Women in the Cane
Deborah Gewertz andFrederick Errington
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Toward an Anthropology of Excess: Wanting More (While Getting Less) on a Caribbean Global Periphery
Samuel Martínez
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End Matter
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