Frazer, Sir James George
Frazer, Sir James George (1854–1941) Born and educated in Scotland, Frazer came to Cambridge to carry out research in 1879, remaining there for the rest of his long career. Originally trained as a classicist, he came to comparative anthropology under the influence of the work of W. Robertson-Smith and Edward Burnett
Tylor, although this was based on correspondence with travellers, rather than on fieldwork, and focused almost exclusively on religion and systems of belief.
Frazer was best known in his lifetime for the much read and many-volumed
Golden Bough (1890), in which he examined the meaning of divine sacrifice, compulsively adding more and more examples from ethnography, folklore, mythology, and the Bible. Espousing an
evolutionary approach, he claimed to have discovered the intellectual history of human societies, progressing from magic, through
religion, to science. He viewed the last of these as a return to magical techniques and logic–but using correct (empirically tested) hypotheses and methodologies. It has been suggested that the huge popularity of his work rested on the implication that
Christianity is simply a form of magic, an idea that appealed to emerging rationalistic philosophy. His books are little read now, although it is generally acknowledged that his work stimulated ethnographic activity world-wide.
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Lessons from life: that voodoo that you do (or, the "technique trap" and how to avoid it). (direct marketing creative)
Magazine article from: Direct Marketing; 12/1/1996; ; 700+ words
; ...It was an abridged version of Sir James George Frazer's classic 1890 anthropological...Magic." In the first paragraph, Frazer says that magic is based on the...advance." Curious. While Sir Frazer certainly did not have direct marketing...
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Striped-petticoat Philosophy.(TOPICS, NOTES AND COMMENTS)
Magazine article from: Folklore; 8/1/2005; ; 700+ words
; Sir James Frazer's interpretations...striegeln and gestriegelt, Frazer's eye strayed to the end...diverse material adapted by Frazer from foreign-language sources...published in London, 1611. Frazer, James George. The Golden Bough. 1st...
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Footnotes
Newspaper article from: The Sunday Herald; 2/10/2002; 700+ words
; ...fallout from the demise of James Thin's, the Edinburgh...to Hoo-Hahs he quotes George Santayana. "Progress...Manners Makyth Man, and Sir James Frazer's The Golden Bough...scarred hacks, including George Alagiah, John Simpson...
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Heroism and Redemption the Mad Max Trilogy.(Critical Essay)
Magazine article from: Journal of Popular Film and Television; 9/22/1999; ; 700+ words
; ...characters, inspired by director George Miller's emergency room experience...In fact, an interview with George Miller by David Chute in Film Comment...Miller, relied on sources such as Sir James Frazer's The Golden Bough and Jesse L...
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Some talk of Alexander: Frederic Raphael explains how the isles of Greece, and the rest of the classical world, caught his imagination.(POINT OF DEPARTURE)
Magazine article from: History Today; 4/1/2006; ; 700+ words
; ...anthropological approach (following Sir James Frazer) pioneered by Jane Harrison in...in the false glow of Marxism, by George Thomson's Aeschylus and Athens...modern Greek world of Yannis Ritsos, George Seferis and Constantine Cavafy...
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Theory in Anthropology Since the Enlightenment
Magazine article from: Anthropological Quarterly; 7/1/2005; ; 700+ words
; ...history of our discipline, following in the steps of George Stocking, Jr. (1992 and 1995) who has contributed...end of this second chapter, mentioning the position Sir James Frazer had at the University of Liverpool in the first decade...
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Review: Books: The lore of supply and demand Many of England's `ancient folk customs' are not that ancient at all, says Noel Malcolm
Newspaper article from: The Sunday Telegraph London; 7/16/2000; ; 700+ words
; ...old man with a long white beard, and his name was Sir James Frazer. He wrote a big book - The Golden Bough - in so many...few). One standard plot involves combat between St George and a Turkish Knight; accordingly, it used to be thought...
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Literature and Sport as Ritual and Fantasy.
Magazine article from: Papers on Language & Literature; 9/22/2001; ; 700+ words
; ...the romance. Pursuing convergent interests to those in Sir James Frazer's analysis of primitive religion and ritual contained...and flourished. It has been noted by the philologist George Lakoff, in Metaphors We Live By, that "fundamental...
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Daily News, Eternal Stories: The Mythological Role of Journalism
Magazine article from: Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly; 4/1/2002; ; 700+ words
; ...and essays of Elizabeth Bird and Robert Dardenne, James Carey (including his edited volume, Media, Myths...the work of several major scholars of myth, including Sir George Frazer, Carl Jung, and Joseph Campbell, but especially the...
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Faulkner and the Thoroughly Modern Novel.
Magazine article from: Studies in the Novel; 6/22/1993; ; 700+ words
; HLAVSA, VIRGINIA V. JAMES. (Charlottesville: University...that Faulkner was familiar with Sir James George Frazer's complete twelve-volume Golden Bough. Frazer's work, a pioneering example...
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Sir James George Frazer
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
Sir James George Frazer Sir James George Frazer (1854-1941), a British classicist and anthropologist, was the author of "The Golden Bough," a classic study of magic and religion. It popularized anthropology. James Frazer was born in Glasgow...
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Frazer, Sir James George
Book article from: A Dictionary of Sociology
Frazer, Sir James George (1854–1941) Born and educated in Scotland, Frazer came to Cambridge to carry out research...exclusively on religion and systems of belief. Frazer was best known in his lifetime for the...
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Frazer, James George
Dictionary entry from: Complete Dictionary of Scientific Biography
Frazer, James George ( b . Glasgow, Scotland...May 1941) anthropology . Frazer, the elder son of Daniel...distort the original report. Frazer also corresponded with fieldworkers...Bronislaw Malinowski and Sir Baldwin Spencer ’...
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Primitivism
Encyclopedia entry from: International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences
...and religion from new intellectual and cultural perspectives: Sir James George Frazer ’ s The Golden Bough: A Study in Magic and Religion...and D. H. Lawrence ’ s The Plumed Serpent (1926). Frazer ’
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Magic
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of Food and Culture
...religious rites has also been interpreted in many ways. Sir James George Frazer thought that magic was founded on men and women's...Vlasij; and Yarila, the god of fertility, with St. George. The roles of these figures are reflected in folklore...
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