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anthropology
Books & Arts
Making a meal of it
Martha Macintyre
22 January 2024
How technology, migration and population transformed crops, foods and ways of eating
From the archive
Revisiting Bloodwood Bore
Shannyn Palmer
17 November 2023
An extract from
Unmaking Angas Downs
, which has won this year’s Prime Minister’s Literary Award for Australian History
Books & Arts
Being human
Martha Macintyre
4 November 2023
An anthropologist sees a radically distinctive humanity among Taiwan’s Indigenous peoples
Books & Arts
Other people’s objects
Martha Macintyre
6 September 2023
Adam Kuper’s survey of museums culminates in a plea for “cosmopolitan” institutions
Books & Arts
A reservoir of possibilities
Holly High & Joshua O. Reno
28 July 2023
David Graeber’s latest book isn’t his best, but still we love it
Books & Arts
Double-sided mirror
Martha Macintyre
25 January 2023
How anthropology flourished as colonialism began its decline
Books & Arts
First, learn the language
Martha Macintyre
8 August 2021
Gillian Tett, the woman who predicted the global financial crisis, uses anthropological tools to probe how business works
Books & Arts
The trouble with history
Peter Sutton and Keryn Walshe
6 August 2021
The authors of
Farmers or Hunter-gatherers? The Dark Emu Debate
respond to Bill Gammage’s “The Great Divide”
Books & Arts
Sea of islands
Alison Bashford
16 July 2021
Anthropologist Nicholas Thomas is a skilled and knowledgeable guide to Pacific voyaging
Books & Arts
The teller and the tale
Tim Rowse
16 June 2021
What is Indigenous knowledge and who has it? Tim Rowse reviews Peter Sutton and Keryn Walshe’s critique of Bruce Pascoe’s
Dark Emu
Books & Arts
In the field
Martha Macintyre
16 May 2021
How five pioneering anthropologists pushed at the boundaries of what it meant to be a woman
Books & Arts
Was Derek Freeman “mad”?
Martha Macintyre
28 January 2018
The controversial critic of anthropologist Margaret Mead was a man driven to extremes
From the archive
Communist, scientist, lover, spy
Klaus Neumann
3 October 2015
The personal and the political are bound up in the life of anthropologist, Stasi informer and one-time Canberra resident Fred Rose
Essays & Reportage
Friend or foe? Anthropology’s encounter with Aborigines
Gillian Cowlishaw
19 August 2015
Anthropologists might have been implicated in colonial policies and practices, writes
Gillian Cowlishaw
, but for many decades theirs was the only scholarly discipline…
Books & Arts
“When I forget, I’m well. Remembering, even now, I just go crazy”
Klaus Neumann
23 December 2013
Does the equation that infuses the work of truth commissions – that more memory equals more reconciliation – always meet the needs of people affected by widespread…
Books & Arts
Winner’s curse?
Anna Cristina Pertierra
22 August 2013
Despite the global financial crisis and high-profile scandals, money continues to flow at the highest end of the art auction market.
Anna Cristina Pertierra
looks at why
Books & Arts
Not quite nailing a “failed debate”
Tim Rowse
3 October 2011
Tim Rowse
reviews an account of the debate about Indigenous communities in remote Australia
Books & Arts
Beyond the easy life of gods
Annika Lems
12 July 2011
Annika Lems
reviews anthropologist Michael Jackson’s illuminating account of his return to the village of Firawa in Sierra Leone
Summer season
The strange career of the Australian conscience
Dean Ashenden
10 June 2010
The remarkable collaboration of anthropologists Baldwin Spencer and Frank Gillen, “bearers, shapers and captives of the Australian conscience”