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E-raamat: Ethnographic Chiefdom: Epistemic Arrest and Knowledge Production in Czechoslovak Ethnography (1969-1989)

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"The Czechoslovak academic discipline called 'Ethnography and Folklore Studies' was impacted and influenced by the daily realities of state socialism in 1969-1989. This book examines the role of the planned economy, Marxist-Leninist ideology, disciplinary hierarchies and clientelist networks, ultimately showing how state socialist features together brought about the discipline's epistemic stalling. It offers a fresh perspective on the long-standing debates purporting to capture the differences between the Central and Eastern European tradition of ethnology and Western sociocultural anthropology"--

The Czechoslovak academic discipline called ‘Ethnography and Folklore Studies’ was impacted and influenced by the daily realities of state socialism in 1969–1989. This book examines the role of the planned economy, Marxist–Leninist ideology, disciplinary hierarchies and clientelist networks, ultimately showing how state socialist features together brought about the discipline’s epistemic stalling. It offers a fresh perspective on the long-standing debates purporting to capture the differences between the Central and Eastern European tradition of ethnology and Western sociocultural anthropology.

Arvustused

The book is clearly organized and the presentation maintains a high standard throughout. It is an original reappraisal of late socialist ethnography in Prague. Chris Hann, Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology





This book is an innovative contribution to the history and theory of anthropology. It is an impressive piece of work that introduces a difficult subject in clear prose, is very well written, well composed and with a strong theoretical argument. Han F. Vermeulen, Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology

Acknowledgements

Introduction

Part I

Chapter
1.
Preliminaries
Chapter 2. Bourdieu in Czechoslovakia
Chapter 3. Ethnography and Folklore Studies as an Intellectual Tradition
Chapter
4. F
rom 1948 to 1968

Part II

Chapter
5. T
he Ethnographic Chiefdom
Chapter 6. Being an Ethnographer~
Chapter 7.
Attitudes to Writing and the Publishing Process
Chapter 8. Epistemic Arrest and the Culture of Contention

Part III

Conclusion

Appendices
Appendix I:
The Heads of Czech and Moravian Ethnography Institutions
Appendix II: Czech Translations of Anthropological Works

References
Index

Nikola Bala is a Postdoctoral Researcher at the Institute of Ethnology of the Czech Academy of Sciences in Prague. He spent a year as an Erasmus student at the Department of Anthropology, Durham University (UK), and is a co-recipient of the SIEF Young Scholar Prize 2023.