Physical anthropology is quite often presented as one of the favorite and most nefarious tools of colonial rule. Approved by science, racial categories shaped colonial segregationist practices, and reciprocally, colonial empires offered anthropologists new opportunities to survey differences among various people. Practices and discourses of physical anthropology thus directly and indirectly spread and deepened modern racism. There are obviously many links between colonial experiences and racism that need to be thoroughly explored. Building on the history of anthropology as well as on the impressive renewal of interest in colonial history for the last two or three decades, I focus on the cumulative anthropological situations created by inves...
International audienceThe rise of modern science and European colonial and imperial expansion are in...
E. Sibeud—The Birth of Africanist Ethnography in France Before 1914. This review of "Africanist ethn...
International audienceAnthropology developed late in France, though the country had cradled its prem...
Physical anthropology is quite often presented as one of the favorite and most nefarious tools of co...
Physical anthropology is quite often presented as one of the favorite and most nefarious tools of co...
International audienceIn the context of 19th- and 20th-century French colonialism, anthropological k...
International audienceThis paper explores the uses of the Weberian notion of «rational domination» a...
The rise of the modern empires threw Europeans into contact with exotic peoples and environments on ...
This paper proposes a set of theoretical and methodological coordinates for examining the role of mu...
t was only in 1957, during the decolonization period, that one finds such signs (although weak). For...
In August 1877, fourteen Africans from Nubia were exhibited among giraffes, camels and elephants fo...
This special issue contributes to an emerging literature on the materialities of colonial government...
International audienceIn the 19th century, scientific racism – derived from a supposedly objective w...
This article analyses how physical anthropologists created scientific circuits between the Netherlan...
Anthropologists in the 1840-1860s thought their science would furnish principles of human guidance. ...
International audienceThe rise of modern science and European colonial and imperial expansion are in...
E. Sibeud—The Birth of Africanist Ethnography in France Before 1914. This review of "Africanist ethn...
International audienceAnthropology developed late in France, though the country had cradled its prem...
Physical anthropology is quite often presented as one of the favorite and most nefarious tools of co...
Physical anthropology is quite often presented as one of the favorite and most nefarious tools of co...
International audienceIn the context of 19th- and 20th-century French colonialism, anthropological k...
International audienceThis paper explores the uses of the Weberian notion of «rational domination» a...
The rise of the modern empires threw Europeans into contact with exotic peoples and environments on ...
This paper proposes a set of theoretical and methodological coordinates for examining the role of mu...
t was only in 1957, during the decolonization period, that one finds such signs (although weak). For...
In August 1877, fourteen Africans from Nubia were exhibited among giraffes, camels and elephants fo...
This special issue contributes to an emerging literature on the materialities of colonial government...
International audienceIn the 19th century, scientific racism – derived from a supposedly objective w...
This article analyses how physical anthropologists created scientific circuits between the Netherlan...
Anthropologists in the 1840-1860s thought their science would furnish principles of human guidance. ...
International audienceThe rise of modern science and European colonial and imperial expansion are in...
E. Sibeud—The Birth of Africanist Ethnography in France Before 1914. This review of "Africanist ethn...
International audienceAnthropology developed late in France, though the country had cradled its prem...