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Social Analysis has long been at the forefront of anthropology's engagement with the humanities and other social sciences. In forming a critical, concerned, and empirical perspective, it encourages contributions that break away from the disciplinary bounds of anthropology and suggest innovative ways of challenging hegemonic paradigms through 'grounded theory', analysis based in original empirical research. The journal invites contributions directed toward a critical and theoretical understanding of cultural, political, and social processes, as well as the work of active ethnographic researchers who study the forces involved in the production of human suffering, poverty, prejudice, war, and violence.

Publisher: Berghahn Journals

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Volume 53, Number 2, Summer 2009
What is Happening to Epistemology? Edited by Christina Toren and João de Pina-Cabra.

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Free Content What Is Happening to Epistemology?
pp. 1-18(18)
Authors: Toren, Christina; de Pina-Cabral, João

Plural Modernity: Changing Modern Institutional Forms—Disciplines and Nation-States
pp. 60-79(20)
Authors: Silva, Filipe Carreira da; Vieira, Mónica Brito

Ontography and Alterity: Defining Anthropological Truth
pp. 80-93(14)
Author: Holbraad, Martin

Intersubjectivity as Epistemology
pp. 130-146(17)
Author: Toren, Christina

The All-or-Nothing Syndrome and the Human Condition
pp. 163-176(14)
Authors: Pina-Cabral, João de

Epistemology and Ethics: Perspectives from Africa
pp. 207-218(12)
Author: Moore, Henrietta L.

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