After being widely rejected in the late 20th century the work of Karl Marx is now being reassessed by many theorists and activists. Karl Marx, Anthropologist explores how this most influential of modern thinkers is still highly relevant for Anthropology today.
Marx was profoundly influenced by critical Enlightenment thought. He believed that humans were social individuals that simultaneously satisfied and forged their needs in the contexts of historically particular social relations and created cultures. Marx continually refined the empirical, philosophical, and practical dimensions of his anthropology throughout his lifetime.
Assessing key concepts, from the differences between class-based and classless societies to the roles of exploitation, alienation and domination in the making of social individuals, Karl Marx, Anthropologist is an essential guide to Marx's anthropological thought for the 21st century.
This is a timely reminder of both the Enlightenment background and holistic nature of Marx' anthropology, which concerns not merely understanding classical industrial capitalism but also such diverse issues as the modern age of empire, human origins and non-Western political systems.
Nikolai Ssorin-Chaikov, University of CambridgeCh. 1 Early Enlightenment Thought * The World Historicized * The New Anthropology of the Enlightenment * Rousseau's Historical-Dialectical Anthropology * The Scottish Historical Philosophers * The Institutionalization of Anthropology * Kant's Pragmatic Anthropology * Herder's Historical-Dialectical Anthropology * G?ttingen: Beyond Anthropology for Doctors and Philosophers * Hegel's Critical-Historical Anthropology * Ch.2 Marx's Anthropology * What are Human Beings? * The Corporeal Organization of Human Beings * Ensembles of Social Relations and Human Beings as Social Individuals * History * Praxis * Ch. 3 Human Natural Beings * Charles Darwin and the Development of Modern Evolutionary Theory * Darwinlc(