Jack Goody : the anthropology of unequal society

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Authors

Hart, Keith

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Routledge

Abstract

In almost four decades Jack Goody has published a score of books seeking to explain the divergence of Africa from the Eurasian continent, and latterly to refute historical claims of western superiority to Asia. Since the millennium, he has sought to clarify his own vision of modern capitalism at a time when western hegemony is coming under pressure from globalization. Yet this achievement has not received the recognition from anthropologists that it deserves. This article, in reviewing six books published during the last decade, makes a case for reassessing Goody’s project from the mid-1970s until now. It singles out two books for special attention, The Theft of History and his latest volume, Metals, Culture and Capitalism. A consistent theme of his recent work is to juxtapose his own account of the history of western capitalism with those of Marx, Weber and other writers in the classical tradition of social theory. Jack Goody remains to this day an anthropologist whose sensibility was formed by long-term ethnographic fieldwork. But he knew that, if he aspired to throw light on the human predicament as a whole, he would have to become a world historian too.

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Capitalism, Eurasia, Metals, Renaissance, The West, World history

Sustainable Development Goals

Citation

Keith Hart (2014) Jack Goody: The Anthropology of Unequal Society, Reviews in Anthropology, 43:3, 199-220, DOI: 10.1080/00938157.2014.937667.