Homo imperii : a history of physical anthropology in Russia /
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Author / Creator: | Mogilʹner, Marina, author. |
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Imprint: | Lincoln : University of Nebraska Press, [2013] |
Description: | xiv, 486 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm. |
Language: | English |
Series: | Critical studies in the history of anthropology Critical studies in the history of anthropology. |
Subject: | |
Format: | Print Book |
URL for this record: | http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/9136340 |
Table of Contents:
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgments
- Series Editors' Introduction
- Introduction: The Science of Imperial Modernity
- Part 1. Paradoxes of Institutionalization
- 1. Academic Genealogy and Social Contexts of the "Atypical Science"
- 2. Anthropology as a "Regular Science": Kafedra
- 3. Anthropology as a Network Science: Society
- Part 2. The Liberal Anthropology of Imperial Diversity: Apolitical Politics
- 4. Aleksei Ivanovskii's Anthropological Classification of the Family of "Racial Relatives"
- 5. "Russians" in the Language of Liberal Anthropology
- 6. Dmitrii Anuchin's Liberal Anthropology
- Part 3. Anthropology of Russian Imperial Nationalism
- 7. Ivan Sikorsky and His "Imperial Situation"
- 8. Academic Racism and "Russian National Science"
- Part 4. Anthropology of Russian Multinationalism
- 9. The Space between "Empire" and "Nation"
- 10. "Jewish Physiognomy," the "Jewish Question," and Russian Race Science between Inclusion and Exclusion
- 11. A "Dysfunctional" Colonial Anthropology of Imperial Brains
- Part 5. Russian Military Anthropology: From Army-as-Empire to Army-as-Nation
- 12. Military Mobilization of Diversity Studies
- 13. The Imperial Army through National Lenses
- 14. Nation Instead of Empire
- Part 6. Race and Social Imagination
- 15. The Discovery of Population Politics and Sociobiological Discourses in Russia
- 16. Meticization as Modernization, or the Sociobiological Utopias of Ivan Ivanovich Pantiukhov
- 17. The Criminal Anthropology of Imperial Society
- Conclusion: Did Russian Physical Anthropology Become Soviet?
- Notes
- Index