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Introduction to the Work of Marcel Mauss

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Few teachings have remained so esoteric and few, at the same time, have exerted such a profound influence as that of Marcel Mauss. This thought sometimes made opaque by its very density, but all furrowed with flashes, these tortuous steps which seemed to lead astray at the moment when the most unexpected of routes led to the heart of the problems, only those who have known and listened to the man can appreciate fertility fully and take stock of their debt to it. We will not dwell here on its role in French ethnological and sociological thought. It has been reviewed elsewhere. Suffice it to recall that Mauss's influence was not limited to ethnographers, none of whom could say they escaped it, but also to linguists, psychologists, historians of religions and orientalists, so much so that, in the field social sciences and humanities, a plethora of French researchers are, in some way, indebted to him for their orientation. For the others, the written work remained too dispersed and often difficult to access. The chance of a meeting or a reading could awaken lasting echoes: one would gladly recognize some of them in Radcliffe-Brown, Malinowski, Evans-Pritchard, Firth, Herskovits, Lloyd Warner, Redfield, Kluckhohn, Elkin, Held and many others. On the whole, the work and the thought of Marcel Mauss acted rather through the intermediary of colleagues and disciples in regular or occasional contact with him, than directly, in the form of words or writings...

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Claude Levi-Strauss

Claude Lévi-Strauss (French: Claude Lévi-Strauss); (November 28, 1908 - October 30, 2009), French sociologist. Lévi-Strauss began his formation by studying philosophy, but these arbitrary abstract theories far from social reality soon disappointed him, so he traveled to Brazil, where he taught sociology and discovered the works of American anthropologists (unknown in Europe at the time) such as Boas, Cropper and Louie. After returning to France in 1948, he presented his thesis on the theoretical problems of kinship. He was elected professor at the Collège de France in 1959 and held the chair of social anthropology that had been held by Marcel Mauss before him. The work and science of Lévi-Strauss had the greatest impact in the field of anthropology and ethnological field investigation.

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