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" Bronislaw Malinowski ," American Anthropologist, n. s., 45: 441 – 451, 1943.
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Bronislaw and Malinowski
Anthropologists such as Franz Boas and Bronislaw Malinowski argued that any human science had to transcend the ethnocentrism of the scientist.
* Argonauts of the Western Pacific, the famous ethnography written by Bronislaw Malinowski about kula exchange in the Trobriand Islands.
He visted the Trobriand Islands in the South Pacific, made famous in studies by the anthropologist Bronislaw Malinowski, and the Huallaga Indians in the Peruvian Amazon.
Ethnobiology frames this interpretation through either " utilitarianists " like Bronislaw Malinowski who maintain that names and classifications reflect mainly material concerns, and " intellectualists " like Claude Lévi-Strauss who hold that they spring from innate mental processes.
Primitive communist societies have often been studied by anthropologists, such as Margaret Mead, Bronislaw Malinowski, and Marcel Mauss.
* The Bronislaw Malinowski Award, given by the Society for Applied Anthropology ( SfAA ) in honour of Bronisław Malinowski ( 1884 – 1942 ), an original member and strong supporter of the Society.
His research was used to support Ernest Jones in his debate with Bronislaw Malinowski over the existence of the Oedipus complex in matrilineal societies.
He was a Professor at London School of Economics and was highly influential as the teacher of such notable anthropologists as Bronislaw Malinowski, E. E.
Bronislaw and .
In the fall of that year the best musicians of the Berlin and Frankfurt Kulturbund orchestras joined under the combined efforts of Bronislaw Hubermann and Steinberg to become the Palestine Orchestra -- now known as the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra -- with Steinberg as founder-conductor.
* Lokot Republic, Russia ( 1941 – 1943 )-The Lokot Republic under Konstantin Voskoboinik and Bronislaw Kaminski was a semi-autonomous region in Nazi-occupied Russia under an all-Russian administration.
On July 11, 2011 the President of Poland, Bronislaw Komorowski asked for forgiveness at a ceremony to mark the 70th anniversary of the Jedwabne massacre.
*“ Damen-Streichquartett Soldat Roeger – Böhmisches Streichquartett, Alexander Borodin, Robert Hausmann, Bronislaw Huberman ,” Die Zeit, Band 6 ( 1896 ), p. 130.
*“ Bronislaw Huberman-Damen-Streichquartett Soldat-Roeger-Richard Mühlfeld-Felix Weingartner ,” Die Zeit, Band 6 ( 1896 ), p. 194.
Emanuel Hurwitz ( leader ) won a scholarship to the Royal Academy of Music in a contest adjudicated by Bronislaw Huberman.
Among his pupils were Edwin Bélanger, Bronislaw Gimpel, Ivry Gitlis, Szymon Goldberg, Ida Haendel, Josef Hassid, Alma Moodie, Ginette Neveu, Ricardo Odnoposoff, Max Rostal, Henryk Szeryng, Henri Temianka, Roman Totenberg and Josef Wolfsthal, all of whom achieved considerable fame as both performers and pedagogues.
He claimed that the voices originated from a headstone of a deceased Polish man, Bronislaw Zapolski, and that the voices were that of God.
He was also variously credited as Bronislaw Kaper, Bronislaw Kapper, Benjamin Kapper, and Edward Kane.
He also collaborated with some of the finest composers including, Grace LeBoy Kahn ( his wife ), Richard A. Whiting, Buddy DeSylva, Al Jolson, Raymond Egan, Ted Fio Rito, Ernie Erdman, Neil Moret, Vincent Youmans, George Gershwin, Ira Gershwin, Harry Akst, Harry M. Woods, Edward Eliscu, Victor Schertzinger, Arthur Johnston, Bronislaw Kaper, Jerome Kern, Walter Jurmann, Sigmund Romberg and Harry Warren, though his primary collaborator was Walter Donaldson.
Bronislaw and –
* Henry Roth, Bronislaw Hubermann, in Violin Virtuosos, From Paganini to the 21st Century, Los Angeles, California Classics Books, 1997, pp. 70 – 79
Malinowski and ,"
" Reich received support from overseas, first from the anthropologist Bronisław Malinowski ( 1884 – 1942 ), who wrote to the press in Norway in March 1938 that Reich's " sociological works ... a distinct and valuable contribution toward science ," and from A. S. Neill ( 1883 – 1973 ), founder of Summerhill, a progressive school in England, who argued that " the campaign against Reich seems largely ignorant and uncivilized, more like fascism than democracy ..."
Malinowski and American
Malinowski and .
A decade and a half later, the Polish anthropology student, Bronisław Malinowski ( 1884 – 1942 ), was beginning what he expected to be a brief period of fieldwork in the old model, collecting lists of cultural items, when the outbreak of the First World War stranded him in New Guinea.
Malinowski and Radcliffe-Brown's influence stemmed from the fact that they, like Boas, actively trained students and aggressively built up institutions that furthered their programmatic ambitions.
Bronisław Malinowski developed the ethnographic method, and Franz Boas taught it in the United States.
Boas developed the principle of cultural relativism and Malinowski developed the theory of functionalism as guides for producing non-ethnocentric studies of different cultures.
The books The Sexual Life of Savages in North-Western Melanesia, by Bronisław Malinowski, Patterns of Culture by Ruth Benedict, and Coming of Age in Samoa by Margaret Mead ( two of Boas's students ) are classic examples of anti-ethnocentric anthropology.
Halliday describes his grammar as built on the work of Saussure, Louis Hjelmslev, Malinowski, J. R. Firth, and the Prague school linguists.
Bronisław Malinowski describes ritual language as possessing a high " coefficient of weirdness ", by which he means that the language used in ritual is archaic and out of the ordinary, which helps foster the proper mindset to believe in the ritual.
Bronisław Malinowski, in Coral Gardens and their Magic ( 1935 ), suggests that this belief is an extension of man's basic use of language to describe his surroundings, in which " the knowledge of the right words, appropriate phrases and the more highly developed forms of speech, gives man a power over and above his own limited field of personal action.
Malinowski argues that " the language of magic is sacred, set and used for an entirely different purpose to that of ordinary life.
The functionalist perspective, usually associated with Bronisław Malinowski, maintains that all aspects of society are meaningful and interrelated.
While generally considered distinct categories in western cultures, the interactions, similarities, and differences have been central to the study of magic for many theorists in sociology and anthropology, including Frazer, Mauss, S. J. Tambiah, Malinowski, Michael Nevin and Isabelle Sarginson.
In his essay " Magic, Science and Religion ", Bronisław Malinowski contends that every person, no matter how primitive, uses both magic and science.
According to Malinowski, magic and religion are also similar in that they often serve the same function in a society.
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