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Informationen zum Autor Thomas R. Trautmann is a professor of history and anthropology at the University of Michigan. He is the author of several books, including Dravidian Kinship, Aryans and British India, The Aryan Debate, and Languages and Nations: The Dravidian Proof in Colonial Madras. Klappentext Lewis Henry Morgan of Rochester, New York, lawyer and pioneering anthropologist, was the leading American contributor of his generation to the social sciences. Among the classic works whose conjunction in the 1860s gave modern anthropology its shape, Morgan's massive and technical "Systems of Consanguinity and Affinity of the Human Family" was decisive. Thomas R. Trautmann offers a new interpretation of the genesis of "kinship" and of the role it played in late nineteenth-century intellectual history. This Bison Books edition features a new introduction and appendices by the author. Zusammenfassung Offers a different interpretation of the genesis of "kinship" and of the role it played in late nineteenth-century intellectual history. Inhaltsverzeichnis IntroductionList of IllustrationsPrefaceAcknowledgments1. Kinship and Its Inventors2. Scale of Mind, Scale of History3. A Lawyer among the Iroquois4. Philology in Its Relations to Ethnology5. Generalizing Iroquois6. Nature and Art7. Conjectural History8. Kinship's Other Inventors9. Of Time and Ethnology10. Contributions to KnowledgeAppendix 1: The Revolution in Ethnological TimeAppendix 2: India and the Study of Kinship TerminologiesAppendix 3: The Whole History of Kinship Terminologies in Three Chapters: Before Morgan, Morgan, and After MorganBibliographyIndex