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Marius Barbeau's Vitalist Ethnology: Mercury

Autor Frances M. Slaney
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 27 mar 2023
This book examines Marius Barbeau's career at Canada's National Museum (now the Canadian Museum of History), in light of his education at Oxford and in Paris (1907-1911). Based on archival research in England, France and Canada, Marius Barbeau's Vitalist Ethnology presents Barbeau's anthropological training at Oxford through his meticulous course notes, as well as archival photographs at the Pitt Rivers Museum and the Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec. It also draws upon Barbeau's professional correspondence at Library and Archives Canada, the BC Archives, and, above all, the National Museum, where he worked for over four decades. The author, Frances M. Slaney, sheds light on the professional life of this founder of Canadian anthropology, exploring his difficult working relationships with Edward Sapir, his collaborations with Franz Boas, and his outstanding fieldwork in rural Quebec and with Indigenous communities on British Columbia's Northwest Coast. Barbeau penned over 1,000 books and articles, in addition to curating innovative museum exhibitions and art shows. He invited Group of Seven artists into his field sites, convinced that their works could better capture the "vitality" of Quebec's rural culture than his own abundant photographs. For these-and many other-contributions, the Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada recognized him as a "person of national historic importance" in 1985.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780776637129
ISBN-10: 0776637126
Pagini: 538
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 29 mm
Greutate: 0.71 kg
Editura: Canadian Museum of History
Colecția Mercury
Seria Mercury


Notă biografică

Frances M. Slaney received her BA in Anthropology from the University of British Columbia and her MA and PhD from Laval University in Québec City. She was Assistant Professor of Anthropology at the University of Regina and then Associate Professor of Anthropology at Carleton University. Following her doctoral thesis based on fieldwork among the Tarahumara, or Rarámuri, of the Sierra Tarahumara in northwestern Mexico, she turned to archival research into the history of anthropology.