KARL
MARX ANTHROPOLOGISTS
Thomas C.
Patterson
2009
Pages :
237
Preface ix
Chronology xi
Introduction 1
Polemics, Caveats, and
Standpoints 3
Organization of the Book 5
1 The
Enlightenment and Anthropology 9
Early Enlightenment Thought 10
The New Anthropology of the
Enlightenment 15
The Institutionalization of
Anthropology 23
2 Marx’s
Anthropology 39
What are Human Beings? 41
History 51
Truth and Praxis 57
3 Human Natural
Beings 65
Charles Darwin and the
Development of Modern Evolutionary Theory 67
Human Natural Beings: Bodies That
Walk, Talk, Make Tools, and
Have Culture 74
Marx on the Naturalization of
Social Inequality 87
4 History,
Culture, and Social Formation 91
Marx’s Historical-Dialectical
Conceptual Framework 93
Pre-Capitalist Societies:
Limited, Local, and Vital 105
5 Capitalism and
the Anthropology of the Modern World 117
The Transition to Capitalism and
its Development 119
The Articulation of Modes of
Production 128
Property,
Power, and Capitalist States 138
6 Anthropology
for the Twenty-First Century 145
Social Relations and the
Formation of Social Individuals 147
Anthropology: “The Study of
People in Crisis by People in Crisis” 158
Notes 173
Bibliography 181
Index 219
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