Successor to Claude Levi-Strauss at the College de
France, Philippe Descola has become one of the most
important anthropologists working today, and Beyond
Nature and Culture has been a major influence in
European intellectual life since its French publication
in 2005. Here, finally, it is brought to
English-language readers. At its heart is a question
central to both anthropology and philosophy: what is the
relationship between nature and culture? Culture - as a
collective human making, of art, language, and so forth
- is often seen as essentially different than nature,
which is portrayed as a collective of the nonhuman
world, of plants, animals, geology, and natural forces.
Descola shows this essential difference to be, however,
not only a specifically Western notion, but also a very
recent one. Drawing on ethnographic examples from around
the world and theoretical understandings from cognitive
science, structural analysis, and phenomenology, he
formulates a sophisticated new framework, the "four
ontologies" - animism, totemism, naturalism, and
analogism - to account for all the ways we relate
ourselves to nature. By thinking beyond nature and
culture as a simple dichotomy, Descola offers nothing
short of a fundamental reformulation by which
anthropologists and philosophers can see the world
afresh.
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