In the Museum of Man offers new insight into the thorny
relationship between science, society, and empire at the high-water
mark of French imperialism and European racism. Alice L. Conklin
takes us into the formative years of French anthropology and social
theory between 1850 and 1900; then deep into the practice of
anthropology, under the name of ethnology, both in Paris and in the
empire before and especially after World War I; and finally, into
the fate of the discipline and its practitioners under the German
Occupation and its immediate aftermath.
Conklin addresses the influence exerted by academic networks,
museum collections, and imperial connections in defining human
diversity socioculturally rather than biologically, especially in
the wake of resurgent anti-Semitism at the time of the Dreyfus
Affair and in the 1930s and 1940s. Students of the progressive
social scientist Marcel Mauss were exposed to the ravages of
imperialism in the French colonies where they did fieldwork; as a
result, they began to challenge both colonialism and the scientific
racism that provided its intellectual justification. Indeed, a
number of them were killed in the Resistance, fighting for the
humanist values they had learned from their teachers and in the
field. A riveting story of a close-knit community of scholars who
came to see all societies as equally complex, In the Museum of Man
serves as a reminder that if scientific expertise once authorized
racism, anthropologists also learned to rethink their paradigms and
mobilize against racial prejudice a lesson well worth remembering
today."
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