Ethos and Identity

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A01=A.L. Epstein
A01=Alan Merriam
African National Congress
Agnatic Principle
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Author_Alan Merriam
Bemba Chief
Bemba Country
Bemba Culture
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cultural self-identification
Efficient Military Organization
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ethnic
ethnic identity formation
Ethnic Ranking
ethnicity social structure research
Ethno Linguistic Lines
Father Son Relationship
Gazelle Peninsula
Gilded Ghettos
London Missionary Society
Northern Rhodesia African National Congress
P2 Generation
postcolonial societies
Pre-colonial Days
psychoanalytic perspectives ethnicity
Radcliffe Brown's View
Radcliffe Brown’s View
social anthropology
sociological analysis ethnicity
Superordina Tion
Swazi Society
Tall Flag Pole
Yankee City
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780202308432
  • Weight: 362g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Mar 2006
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Ethos and Identity asks the ever-puzzling question: What is ethnicity and how is it to be explained? In a new introduction to this work, Athena Leoussi describes Epstein's response to this challenging age-old query, and demonstrates why this classic volume is of continuing importance.

Originally published thirty years ago, Ethos and Identity still fascinates the twenty-first century reader. Epstein's volume explains ethnic revivals of the past century, while the new introduction discusses those that occurred after the book's original publication, such as during the collapse of the communist Eastern bloc in the 1990s. Epstein offers insight into other ethnic reawakenings, such as that experienced during the late 1960s and early 1970s after the collapse of post-colonial east Asia. Prior to this, in the late 1940s and early 1950s, following World War II and the establishment of the United Nations, it was expected that ethnic identifications would be superseded by a more modern, universalistic, rational, civic- or class-based form. This did not occur. Instead, as nations collapsed and were reborn in new forms, people continued to identify with their ethnicity in describing themselves, even when their countries, at least as they knew them, no longer existed. In short, people and their cultures live on long after political and national boundaries have disappeared and been redrawn. Epstein's decisive contribution to the understanding of ethnicity proposes a "social anthropology of affect." People incorporate the social structure of ethnicity into the makeup of their personality and, thus, self-identification.

Ethos and Identity is sure to interest students of anthropology, sociology, psychoanalysis, psychology, and ethnicity.

Arnold Leonard (Bill) Epstein, anthropologist, professor and writer, held research fellowships and appointments at the Rhodes-Livingstone Institute in Lansaka, Northern Rhodesia, the University of Manchester, the Australian National University in Canberra, the University of Sussex, the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences at Stanford University, and the Netherlands Institute of Advanced Studies in Wessenaar. Athena S. Leoussi teaches nationalism and European studies at the University of Reading, England. She is the author of Nationalism and Classicism and editor of The Encyclopaedia of Nationalism, available from Transacction.

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