Pictures from Google Image Search

American Anthropological Association

International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences | 2008 | Copyright 2008 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

American Anthropological Association

BIBLIOGRAPHY

The establishment of the American Anthropological Association (AAA) in 1902 was the culmination of a gradual process of professionalization in American anthropology that revealed subdisciplinary, regional, and theoretical tensions within the emerging discipline. The first anthropological society in the United States was the American Ethnological Society, founded in New York by Albert Gallatin (1761-1849) in 1842 and revived by Franz Boas (1858-1942) in the 1890s to balance the Washington-based Bureau of American Ethnologys potential stranglehold that threatened to dominate anthropology on a national scale. Section H of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, established in 1882, already provided annual meetings for anthropologists but not visibility among the social science disciplines or discrete professional identity.

Abortive efforts to establish a separate organization in 1897 floundered over Washington hegemony, with the compromise being a new series of the Bureau of American Ethnologybased journal American Anthropologist co-organized by W. J. McGee (1853-1912) of the bureau and Boas in New York. The diverse editorial board reinforced the revamped journals claim to national representation and self-consciously built toward a formal professional organization in the near future. Boas wanted to wait until he had trained more professional anthropologists and solidified his organizational control over the discipline.

The American Anthropological Association that was established in 1902 compromised between Boass insistence on professional gatekeeping and McGees populism, a contrast reflecting their respective institutional frameworks of university and government. The Washington contingent, backed by Frederick Ward Putnams (1839-1915) archaeological bailiwick at Harvards Peabody Museum of American Archaeology and Ethnology, supported evolutionary theory in the mode of Lewis Henry Morgan (1818-1881), whereas Boas critiqued this paradigm in favor of historical particularism.

Boas succeeded in restricting the organizational meeting to forty carefully chosen professionals, but McGee ensured that any interested person could join. The AAA began with 175 members, including sixteen women, incorporating members of the Anthropological Society of Washington. McGee became the first president, but his successors were carefully chosen to represent alternative regional and local components of the national membership. Boas served as the third president of the AAA in 1907 to 1908, succeeding Putnam, who had long been the permanent secretary of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. When the inclusive structure rapidly proved unwieldy, the establishment of an executive council further enshrined Boass aspirations to professionalism by limiting decision-making power to the established elite, increasingly under his patronage.

World War I (1914-1918) polarized the hyperpatriotism and racialism of the National Research Council against Boasian autonomy of science on both ethical and intellectual grounds. Boas was German and a pacifist about the war, a critic of eugenics, and ambivalent about collaboration between universities and museums. Archaeology and physical anthropology were left tacitly to Putnam at Harvard. In 1919, after the war had officially ended, Boas accused unnamed anthropological colleagues working in Mexico, representing his still powerful longterm nemeses in the Cambridge/Washington axis, of spying under cover of research. In the resulting furor, Boas was removed as anthropologys representative to the National Research Council, censured by his own professional association, and removed from its council. Despite the apparent defeat, however, this was the last time that anti-Boasian forces would challenge successfully his organizational leadership, commitment to professional credentials, and effective critique of evolution, or that the institutional core of American anthropology would be academic. Thereafter, Boass former students and protégés edited the American Anthropologist, represented the AAA on the three research councils, and headed the growing number of university programs credentialing new anthropologists. The discipline and the AAA grew incrementally during the interwar years under this balanced structure.

During World War II (1939-1945), many anthropologists entered government service. At the wars end, the discipline was poised for exponential growth. The 1945 annual meeting narrowly averted schism led by archaeologists and younger anthropologists. During the annual meeting of 1946, concurrent sessions were held for the first time. The 1946 AAA meeting introduced a distinction between members and fellows that persisted until the 1970s. The new structure maintained the inclusive subdisciplinary scope of cultural, physical, archaeological, and linguistic specialization (although the three latter also participated in independent associations). This structure was intended to render anthropology competitive among the social sciences. An AAA Research Committee was established to seek philanthropic support for anthropology in the transition to government funding and beyond. Increasingly, the competition would be interdisciplinary, seeking a place for anthropology among the social science disciplines.

The political upheavals of the 1960s initiated centrifugal as well as further numerical expansion in American anthropology. By the 1970s, the academic job market had contracted and many fledgling anthropologists found themselves working outside the ivory tower. Practicing anthropology emerged as the fifth subdiscipline in the AAA structure to accommodate this growing diversity within its membership. Increasingly, the most salient internal schism was a generational conflict between activism and objective science. Many anthropologists on both sides considered these mutually exclusive.

Under the presidency of Anthony F. C. Wallace in 1972, the AAA began its restructuring to mitigate the increasing size and cumbersomeness of the organization and to incorporate its ever more diverse versions of anthropology by establishing specialized sections, while retaining the overall organization as an umbrella. As the powerful university-based old guard was challenged by younger and more radical critics, the AAA strove to legitimize both the activists and the scientists within its membership. A new constitution in 1983 formalized this structure, producing over thirty sections and numerous interest groups and committees by the mid-1990s. Sociocultural anthropology dominated, as it had throughout the history of the AAA, but the other subdisciplines retained their affiliation with the umbrella organization.

Centripetal forces perhaps have come to the forefront again with the decision that AAA membership includes subscriptions to the American Anthropologist as well as section publications. Many AAA members belong to multiple sections and value this acknowledgement of the diversity within their profession. The organization is active in seeking a public voice for anthropology and anthropologists and in maintaining internal dialogue among anthropologists of diverse persuasions.

SEE ALSO Anthropology; Anthropology, Public; Anthropology, U.S.

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Darnell, Regna. 1998. And Along Came Boas: Continuity and Revolution in Americanist Anthropology. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins.

Darnell, Regna, and Frederic W. Gleach, eds. 2002. Celebrating a Century of the American Anthropological Association: Presidential Portraits. Washington, DC: American Anthropological Association; Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press.

Stocking, George W., Jr. 1992. The Ethnographers Magic and Other Essays in the History of Anthropology. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press.

Stocking, George W., Jr. 2001. Delimiting Anthropology: Occasional Essays and Reflections. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press.

Regna Darnell

Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.

  • MLA
  • Chicago
  • APA

"American Anthropological Association." International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences. Thomson Gale. 2008. Encyclopedia.com. 5 Dec. 2009 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

"American Anthropological Association." International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences. Thomson Gale. 2008. Encyclopedia.com. (December 5, 2009). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3045300071.html

"American Anthropological Association." International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences. Thomson Gale. 2008. Retrieved December 05, 2009 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3045300071.html

Learn more about citation styles

Related newspaper, magazine, and trade journal articles from HighBeam Research

(Including press releases, facts, information, and biographies)

Matthew, Poet of the Beatitudes
Magazine article from: The Catholic Biblical Quarterly; 4/1/2002; ; 700+ words ; ...GREEN, c.R., Matthew, Poet of the Beatitudes (JSNTSup 203; Sheffield: Sheffield...argues that the Matthean version of the Beatitudes is a carefully constructed poem. Although...According to G., therefore, the Beatitudes reveal the creative hand of the evangelist...
Beatitudes teach faithful the blessings of our Lord.(NATION)(THE CAPITAL PULPIT)
Newspaper article from: The Washington Times; 2/9/2004; 700+ words ; ...Webster: What is a beatitude? The International...Encyclopedia says, "A beatitude is a statement of blessing...or "happiness." Beatitudes are blessings which...are to be, but are Beatitudes that also clearly are...importance of this Beatitude is not that we are...
Beatitudes or be-happy attitudes.(Opinion & Editorial)
Newspaper article from: Manila Bulletin; 1/29/2005; 700+ words ; ...contained in the eight Beatitudes or "Be-happy attitude...The second beatitude: "Blessed are the...The seventh beatitude "Blessed are the peacemakers...families. * * * The eight beatitude is: "Blessed are...guided by the Lords Beatitudes. "Blessed means happy...
His Beatitude Mesrob II of Istanbul, on First Patriarchal Visit to
Newspaper article from: Armenian Reporter, The; 2/6/1999; 700+ words ; ...Jerusalem, His Beatitude Mersey II, Armenian...Jerusalem his Beatitude Torkom II. At 10.30 a.m. Their Beatitudes Patriarchs Torkom...m., Their Beatitudes Patriarch Mesrob...visited. His Beatitude also addressed...
Blessed to Follow: The Beatitudes as a Compass for Discipleship.(Book review)
Magazine article from: Currents in Theology and Mission; 8/1/2009; ; 700+ words ; ...and meanings of the beatitudes. Each of the beatitudes is prefaced by a...discussion of each beatitude involves an assessment...which the particular beatitude makes its claim...appointed readings of the Beatitudes. The author has...
The Beatitudes.(Reflections Today)
Newspaper article from: Manila Bulletin; 6/9/2008; 620 words ; ...gospel passage are called beatitudes, from beati - blessed, or...words in each statement. "Beatitude" is a very special word that...serenity, and loveliness. The beatitudes aren't the "entrance requirements...There's no tense to the beatitudes: Their blessedness exists...
Mother Teresa A living saint of beatitudes, THE INDEPENDENT
Newspaper article from: The Independent (Bangladesh); 9/5/2002; ; 700+ words ; ...living saint of beatitudes: The world very...of Jesus in the Beatitude (see Gospel of...From the eight Beatitudes Mother's direct...can lead a life of Beatitude, i.e., a life of Beatitudes. A life lived in...
His Beatitude Abp. Torkom Manoogian, Armenian Patriarch of Jerusalem,
Newspaper article from: Armenian Reporter, The; 10/26/1996; ; 547 words ; ...Armenian Reporter, The 10-26-1996 His Beatitude Abp. Torkom Manoogian, Armenian Patriarch...Friendships with American Religious Leaders His Beatitude Archbishop Torkom Manoogian, the Armenian...Armenian Church of America, welcomed His Beatitude on behalf of the Diocesan Council, clergy...
The eight beatitudes of writing.
Magazine article from: America; 11/11/1995; ; 700+ words ; ...me. I call them the eight beatitudes, the eight blessings, of...better. Thus, the first beatitude of writing is this: Happy...This brings me to the second beatitude. I distinctly remember how...typewriter and open a vein." Beatitude No. 2 says, Happy are they...
SERVICE TO SHARE BEATITUDES 'LENTEN MORNING OF MEDITATION' OFFERED TODAY.(News)
Newspaper article from: Daily News (Los Angeles, CA); 3/22/2003; 700+ words ; ...statements known as the Beatitudes, from his Sermon on the Mount...wrestled with analyzing the Beatitudes they were assigned. ``I...Tilly will discuss the sixth Beatitude: ``Blessed are the pure...of interpretations on the Beatitudes,'' Tilly said. ``I love...

Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses

Beatitudes, the
Book article from: The Oxford Dictionary of Phrase and Fable Beatitudes, the the blessings listed by Jesus in the Sermon on the Mount (Matthew...righteousness' sake: for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.’ The word beatitude means supreme blessedness; it is recorded from late Middle English...
Beatitudes
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Beatitudes [Lat.,=blessing], in the Gospel of St. Matthew, eight blessings uttered by Jesus at the opening of the Sermon on the Mount...
beatitudes
Book article from: World Encyclopedia beatitudes Blessings spoken by Jesus at the opening of his Sermon on the Mount upon those worthy of admission to the Kingdom of God (Luke 6, Matthew 5).
beatitude
Book article from: The Oxford Pocket Dictionary of Current English be·at·i·tude / bēˈatiˌt(y)oōd / • n. supreme blessedness. ∎  ( the Beatitudes ) the blessings listed by Jesus in the Sermon on the Mount (Matt. 5:3–11).
Beatitudes, The
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Music Beatitudes, The. Cantata by Bliss , 1961, for sop., ten., ch., org., and orch., biblical text being interspersed with poems. F.p. Coventry Cath. 1962.

Find thousands of answers for hundreds of subjects at Smart QandA .

All answers verified by trusted sources at Encyclopedia.com

Try Smart QandA now!

For students and teachers!

Encyclopedia.com provides students and teachers facts, information, and biographies from verified, citable sources, including:

Encyclopedia.com provides students and teachers facts, information, and biographies from verified, citable sources, including: