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Observations on the Intellectual History of Ethnology and other Social Sciences in Yugoslavia
Comparative Studies in Society and History (1969)
  • Joel Halpern, university of massachusetts, Amherst
Abstract
As anthropologists turn increasingly to the study of complex societies, they are led to reflect on the role that social science plays in national ideologies and the ways in which the current state and development of social science reflect other cultural states and processes. Indeed, such reflections can usefully be turned on our own society. One sees that it is much more appropriate to discard old notions of the distinction between ‘science’ and ‘folklore’ and to regard the social science of a particular society, however sophisticated and presumably objective, as an important part of its subjective ideology about itself and the world and thus a part of its own folk theory about the relations of man to society and of men to men. This paper is a sketch of some of the interrelationships between Yugoslav social science and other aspects of Yugoslav culture, with primary emphasis on ethnology.
Keywords
  • Yugoslavia,
  • complex socities,
  • culture,
  • Ethnology,
  • peasant studies
Disciplines
Publication Date
January, 1969
Publisher Statement
Comparative Studies in Society and History (1969), 11:17-26 Cambridge University Press Copyright © Society for the Comparative Study of Society and History 1969 doi:10.1017/S0010417500005120
Citation Information
Joel Halpern. "Observations on the Intellectual History of Ethnology and other Social Sciences in Yugoslavia" Comparative Studies in Society and History Vol. 11 Iss. 1 (1969)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/joel_halpern/66/
Creative Commons license
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons CC_BY-NC International License.