Dados Bibliográficos

AUTOR(ES) R. Taylor , Martin Cohen
AFILIAÇÃO(ÕES) University of Melbourne
ANO 2016
TIPO Book
PERIÓDICO Oceania
ISSN 0029-8077
E-ISSN 1834-4461
DOI 10.1002/ocea.5145
CITAÇÕES 1
ADICIONADO EM 2025-08-14
MD5 c3aa238b9be41c1a829c22378e636f6c

Resumo

Between 1890 and 1905, Edward Burnett Tylor and Henry Ling Roth extended and formalised two ideas that were intricately connected and deeply influential to the development of nineteenth century anthropology: that the Tasmanian Aboriginal people represented the earliest phase of cultural evolution and that they were extinct. This paper offers a detailed archival exploration of the correspondence between 1891–1905 that informed those ideas. It finds that Tylor and Roth not only received abstracted facts and artefacts from their colonial contacts; they were directed and inspired by an emergent Australian scholarship that sought to propose and urge new disciplinary directions. This paper reveals not only the importance of Tasmanian Aboriginal people to the history of science, but the role that scientific ideas have shaped Australian social memory and national identity.

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