ISBN-13: 9780803296039 / Angielski / Miękka / 1986 / 290 str.
Anthropologists since Franz Boas and Margaret Mead have traditionally gone off to study primitive cultures. This collection of original essays breaks new ground in showing how anthropological theories and techniques can be applied to the culture of contemporary middle-class Americans.In Symbolizing America, ten well-known anthropologists pursue self and identity as cultural rather than psychological matters. Looking homeward, they ask What Is American about America? How do we know? and What difference does it make? They analyze such aspects of American culture as advertising, mass-audience movies, patriotic and ethnic parades, church minutes, college parties, greetings, and the dilemmas of adolescent sexuality. Concerned with familiar interactions, they arrive at new insight into the experience of daily life in America.In their symbolic and semiotic approaches, the authors express the variety yet surprising unity of a dynamic American culture. Chapters include Creating America, Doing the Anthropology of America, and Drop in Anytime: Community and Authenticity in American Everyday Life by the editor, Herve Varenne, Teachers College, Columbia University; Freedom to Choose: Symbols and Values in American Advertising by William O. Beeman, Brown University; The story of James] Bond by Lee Drummond, McGill University; The Melting Pot: Symbolic Ritual or Total Social Fact? by Milton Singer, University of Chicago; The Los Angeles Jews Walk for Solidarity: Parade, Festival, Pilgrimage by Barbara Myerhoff and Stephen Mongulla, University of Southern California; History, Faith, and Avoidance by Carol Greenhouse, Cornell University; The Discourse of the Dorm: Race, Friendship, and Culture among College Youth by Michael Moffatt, Rutgers University; Why a Slut is a Slut: Cautionary Tales of American Middle-Class Teenage Girls Morality by Joyce Canaan, Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies; and an epilogue, on the Anthropology of America, by John Caughey, University of Maryland."