Critique of Anthropology

 

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Critique of Anthropology, Vol. 26, No. 4, 363-386 (2006)
DOI: 10.1177/0308275X06070121

World Anthropologies

Cosmopolitics for a New Global Scenario in Anthropology

Gustavo Lins Ribeiro

University of Brasilia

In this article, anthropology is seen as a Western cosmopolitics that consolidated itself as a formal academic discipline in the 20th century within a growing Western university system that expanded throughout the world. Like other cosmopolitics, anthropology reflects the historical dynamics of the world system, especially those related to the changing roles ‘alterity’ may play in international and national scenarios. Some of the most fundamental changes in anthropology in the last century were due to changes in the subject position of anthropology’s ‘object’ par excellence, native peoples all over the planet. But, currently, there is another element which was never duly incorporated by previous critiques and is bound to impact anthropology: the increased importance of the non-hegemonic anthropologists in the production and reproduction of knowledge. Changes in the conditions of conversability among anthropologists located in different loci of the world system will impact the tension between metropolitan provincialism and provincial cosmopolitanism, increase horizontal communication and create more plural world anthropologies.

Key Words: global diversity and anthropology • metropolitan provincialism • provincial cosmopolitanism • world system of anthropology


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