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Fredrik Barth

Thomas Fredrik Weybye Barth (22 December 1928 – 24 January 2016) was a Norwegian social anthropologist who published several ethnographic books with a clear formalist view. He was a professor in the Department of Anthropology at Boston University, and previously held professorships at the University of Oslo, the University of Bergen (where he founded the Department of Social Anthropology), Emory University and Harvard University. He was appointed a government scholar in 1985.[1][2][3]

Fredrik Barth
Born
Thomas Fredrik Weybye Barth

(1928-12-22)22 December 1928
Died24 January 2016(2016-01-24) (aged 87)
Norway
NationalityNorwegian
Alma materUniversity of Chicago (M.A.)
Cambridge University (Ph.D.)
SpouseUnni Wikan
Scientific career
FieldsAnthropology
InstitutionsBoston University
University of Bergen
Doctoral advisorEdmund Leach

Biography and major works

Barth was born in Leipzig, Germany to Thomas Barth, a professor of geology, and his wife Randi Thomassen. They also had a daughter. Barth and his sister grew up in Norway in an academic family. Their uncle was Edvard Kaurin Barth, a professor of zoology.[1] Fredrik Barth developed an interest in evolution and human origins. When his father was invited to give a lecture at the University of Chicago, the younger man accompanied him and decided to attend the university, enrolling in 1946.[4] He earned an MA in paleoanthropology and archaeology in 1949.[5]

After receiving his MA, Barth returned to Norway, keeping a connection to Chicago faculty. In 1951 he joined an archaeological expedition to Iraq led by Robert Braidwood. Barth stayed on after the expedition was over, and conducted ethnographic population studies with the Kurdish population. He spent a year at the London School of Economics (LSE) writing up this data, and in 1953 published his first book, Principles of Social Organization in Southern Kurdistan.[4]: 2–3 

Barth had originally planned to submit the manuscript of his Principles of Social Organization as his Ph.D. dissertation, but was unsuccessful in doing so. He continued graduate study, moving to Cambridge, England to study with Edmund Leach, whom he had previously worked with at the LSE. For his PhD, Barth conducted fieldwork in Swat, Pakistan; his completed dissertation was published in 1959 as Political Leadership among Swat Pathan. Shortly afterwards he was part of a UNESCO study of pastoral nomadism, which focused on the Basseri in what is now Iran. From this work, he published the 1961 monograph Nomads of South Persia.[4] : 3–6 

In 1961, Barth was invited to the University of Bergen to create an anthropology department and serve as the chair. This important and prestigious position gave him the opportunity to introduce British-style social anthropology to Norway. The only other existing anthropology program, at the University of Oslo, was older and connected to the university's ethnographic museum (now the Museum of Cultural History). It was based in Victorian folklore and museum approaches. By founding the department at Bergen, Barth hoped to create a modern, world-class department with an approach similar to those found in England and the United States.[4]: 7 

Barth remained at Bergen from 1961 to 1972. During this time his own work developed in two key ways. First, he developed research projects inside Norway (and published a study entitled The Role of the Entrepreneur in Social Change in Northern Norway in 1963). Second, he began writing more purely theoretical works that secured his international reputation within anthropology. These included Models of Social Organization (1966) and especially the small, edited volume, Ethnic Groups and Boundaries: The Social Organization of Cultural Difference (1969). Barth's introduction to Ethnic Groups and Boundaries became his most well-known essay and "ended up among the top 100 on the social science citation index for a number of years.".[4]: 10 

In 1974 Barth moved to Oslo, where he became professor of social anthropology and the head of the city's Museum of Cultural History. During this period, anthropology was changing. Marxism and interpretive approaches were becoming more central, while Barth's focus on strategy and choice was being taken up by economics and related disciplines.[4]: 9  Barth shifted to studying meaning and ritual as developed in ethnic groups, and conducted research in Papua New Guinea, where he conducted fieldwork with the Baktaman. He published several works from these studies, namely the Ritual and Knowledge among the Baktaman of New Guinea (1975). He also continued studies in the Middle East, conducting fieldwork in Oman with his wife Unni Wikan. This resulted in his 1983 volume Sohar: Culture and Society in an Omani Town.

Barth received a state scholarship from the Norwegian government in 1985. He left the country to accept two positions in the United States—at Emory University from 1989 to 1996, and Boston University from 1997 to 2008.[6]: 7  By this time, Barth and his wife "felt we had both done our share of physically strenuous fieldwork" and decided to begin an ethnographic project in Bali.[4]: 14  He developed an interest in the anthropology of knowledge at around this time, an interest which he explored in his book Balinese Worlds (1993). More recently, he has also conducted research in Bhutan.

Barth was a member of the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters.[7] In 1997 he was elected a Foreign Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.[8]

Personal life

Barth was married 1949–1972 to Mary ("Molly") Allee (27 April 1926 – December 1998),[9] and he was married again 30 January 1974 to Unni Wikan, professor of social anthropology at the University of Oslo, Norway.[6]: 7  His sister Tone Barth (25 January 1924 – 10 October 1980) was married 1945–1963 to Terkel Rosenqvist (1921–2011), also an academic,[10] and she was married again in 1963 to the Norwegian politician for the Conservative Party Vidkunn Hveding (1921–2001). Barth died in Norway on 24 January 2016 at the age of 87.[11]

Main ideas and contributions

He was well known among anthropologists for his Transactionalism analysis of political processes in the Swat Valley of northern Pakistan, and his study of micro-economic processes and entrepreneurship in the area of Darfur in Sudan. The latter has been regarded as a classical example of formalist analysis in economic anthropology. During his long career, Barth has also published acclaimed studies based on field works in Bali, New Guinea, and several countries in the Middle East, thematically covering a wide array of subjects.[2]

Ethnicity

Barth has been an influential scholar on the subject of ethnicity. Andreas Wimmer wrote in 2008, "The comparative study of ethnicity rests firmly on the ground established by Fredrik Barth in his well-known [1969] introduction to a collection of ethnographic case studies."[12] As the editor of Ethnic Groups and Boundaries (1969), Barth outlined an approach to the study of ethnicity that focused on the ongoing negotiations of boundaries between groups of people. Barth's view was that such groups were not discontinuous cultural isolates, or logical a prioris to which people naturally belong.

Barth parted with anthropological notions of cultures as bounded entities, and ethnicity as primordial bonds. He focused on the interface and interaction between groups that gave rise to identities.[2]

Ethnic Groups and Boundaries, which he edited, concentrates on the interconnections of ethnic identities. Barth writes in his introduction (p. 9):

... categorical ethnic distinctions do not depend on an absence of mobility, contact and information, but do entail social processes of exclusion and incorporation whereby discrete categories are maintained despite changing participation and membership in the course of individual life histories.

He emphasizes the use by groups of categories - i.e. ethnic labels - that usually endure even when individual members move across boundaries or share an identity with people in more than one group.

The inter-dependency of ethnic groups is a pivotal argument throughout both the introduction and the following chapters. As interdependent, ethnic identities are the product of continuous so-called ascription (Cf. Ascriptive inequality) and self-ascription, Barth stresses the interactional perspective of social anthropology on the level of the persons involved instead of on a socio-structural level. Ethnic identity becomes and is maintained through relational processes of inclusion and exclusion.[2]

Literature

Biographies
  • Lewis, Herbert S. (2017). « L’anthropologue nomade : Biographie intellectuelle de Frederik Barth », in BEROSE - International Encyclopaedia of the Histories of Anthropology, Paris.
  • Thomas Hylland Eriksen Fredrik Barth: An intellectual biography University of Chicago Press 2015 ISBN 9780745335360
Selected bibliography
  • Balinese worlds. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1993. ISBN 0-226-03833-5
  • Cosmologies in the making : a generative approach to cultural variation in inner New Guinea. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1987. ISBN 0-521-34279-1
  • Sohar, culture and society in an Omani town. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1983. ISBN 0-8018-2840-6
  • Ritual and knowledge among the Baktaman of New Guinea. Oslo: Universitetsforlaget, 1975. ISBN 0-300-01816-9
  • Ethnic groups and boundaries. The social organization of culture difference. Oslo: Universitetsforlaget, 1969. ISBN 978-0-04-572019-4 (Reissued Long Grove, IL: Waveland Press, 1998)
  • Models of social organization. London, Royal Anthropological Institute, 1966.
  • Nomads of South-Persia; the Basseri tribe of the Khamseh Confederacy. Oslo: Universitetsforlaget, 1962.
  • Political leadership among Swat Pathans. London : The Athlone Press, 1959.

References

  1. ^ a b Rosvold, Knut A. (9 August 2012). "Fredrik Barth Biography". Store Norske Leksikon (in Norwegian). Kunnskapsforlaget. Retrieved 27 October 2013.
  2. ^ a b c d Siverts, Henning (13 February 2009). "Fredrik Barth Extended Biography". Norsk Biografisk Leksikon (in Norwegian). Kunnskapsforlaget. Retrieved 27 October 2013.
  3. ^ Jenkins, Richard (2016). "Fredrik Barth: an ethnographer's ethnographer and a theorist's theorist: Fredrik Barth: an ethnographer's ethnographer and a theorist's theorist". Nations and Nationalism. 22 (3): 411–414. doi:10.1111/nana.12231.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Barth, Fredrik (2007). "Overview: Sixty Years of Anthropology". Annual Review of Anthropology. 36: 1–16. doi:10.1146/annurev.anthro.36.081406.094407.
  5. ^ Anderson, Astrid (2012). Fredrik Barth: A Bibliography. Oslo: Universitetsbiblioteket, Oslo. p. 7.
  6. ^ a b Anderson, Astrid (2012). Fredrik Barth: A Bibliography. Oslo: Universitetsbiblioteket i Oslo.
  7. ^ (in Norwegian). Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters. Archived from the original on 27 September 2011. Retrieved 28 October 2009.
  8. ^ "Book of Members, 1780–2010: Chapter B" (PDF). American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Retrieved 18 May 2011.
  9. ^ Siverts, Henning (13 February 2009). "Fredrik Barth Extended Biography". Norsk Biografisk Leksikon (in Norwegian). Oslo: Kunnskapsforlaget. Retrieved 27 October 2013.
  10. ^ Steenstrup, Bjørn, ed. (1973). "Rosenqvist, Terkel". Hvem er hvem? (in Norwegian). Oslo: Aschehoug. p. 470. Retrieved 2 June 2011.
  11. ^ "Fredrik Barth er død". www.dn.no.
  12. ^ Wimmer, Andreas (2008). "The Making and Unmaking of Ethnic Boundaries: A Multilevel Process Theory". American Journal of Sociology. 113 (4): 970–1022. doi:10.1086/522803. ISSN 0002-9602. S2CID 3178127.

External links

  • (in Spanish)
  • (in Spanish)
  • Barth, Fredrik (born 1928) - Entry in the AnthroBase Online Dictionary of Anthropology
  • video interview of Fredrik Barth from Alan Macfarlane's FILMS OF ANTHROPOLOGICAL AND OTHER "ANCESTORS"
  • "Overview: Sixty Years in Anthropology" by Fredrik Barth[permanent dead link]
  • Resources related to research : BEROSE - International Encyclopaedia of the Histories of Anthropology. "Barth, Fredrik (1928-2016)", Paris, 2017. (ISSN 2648-2770)
  • Bergen Open Research Archive[permanent dead link]

fredrik, barth, this, biography, living, person, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, adding, reliable, sources, contentious, material, about, living, persons, that, unsourced, poorly, sourced, must, removed, immediately, especially, poten. This biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification Please help by adding reliable sources Contentious material about living persons that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately especially if potentially libelous or harmful Find sources Fredrik Barth news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message Thomas Fredrik Weybye Barth 22 December 1928 24 January 2016 was a Norwegian social anthropologist who published several ethnographic books with a clear formalist view He was a professor in the Department of Anthropology at Boston University and previously held professorships at the University of Oslo the University of Bergen where he founded the Department of Social Anthropology Emory University and Harvard University He was appointed a government scholar in 1985 1 2 3 Fredrik BarthBornThomas Fredrik Weybye Barth 1928 12 22 22 December 1928Leipzig GermanyDied24 January 2016 2016 01 24 aged 87 NorwayNationalityNorwegianAlma materUniversity of Chicago M A Cambridge University Ph D SpouseUnni WikanScientific careerFieldsAnthropologyInstitutionsBoston UniversityUniversity of BergenDoctoral advisorEdmund Leach Contents 1 Biography and major works 2 Personal life 3 Main ideas and contributions 3 1 Ethnicity 4 Literature 5 References 6 External linksBiography and major works EditBarth was born in Leipzig Germany to Thomas Barth a professor of geology and his wife Randi Thomassen They also had a daughter Barth and his sister grew up in Norway in an academic family Their uncle was Edvard Kaurin Barth a professor of zoology 1 Fredrik Barth developed an interest in evolution and human origins When his father was invited to give a lecture at the University of Chicago the younger man accompanied him and decided to attend the university enrolling in 1946 4 He earned an MA in paleoanthropology and archaeology in 1949 5 After receiving his MA Barth returned to Norway keeping a connection to Chicago faculty In 1951 he joined an archaeological expedition to Iraq led by Robert Braidwood Barth stayed on after the expedition was over and conducted ethnographic population studies with the Kurdish population He spent a year at the London School of Economics LSE writing up this data and in 1953 published his first book Principles of Social Organization in Southern Kurdistan 4 2 3 Barth had originally planned to submit the manuscript of his Principles of Social Organization as his Ph D dissertation but was unsuccessful in doing so He continued graduate study moving to Cambridge England to study with Edmund Leach whom he had previously worked with at the LSE For his PhD Barth conducted fieldwork in Swat Pakistan his completed dissertation was published in 1959 as Political Leadership among Swat Pathan Shortly afterwards he was part of a UNESCO study of pastoral nomadism which focused on the Basseri in what is now Iran From this work he published the 1961 monograph Nomads of South Persia 4 3 6 In 1961 Barth was invited to the University of Bergen to create an anthropology department and serve as the chair This important and prestigious position gave him the opportunity to introduce British style social anthropology to Norway The only other existing anthropology program at the University of Oslo was older and connected to the university s ethnographic museum now the Museum of Cultural History It was based in Victorian folklore and museum approaches By founding the department at Bergen Barth hoped to create a modern world class department with an approach similar to those found in England and the United States 4 7 Barth remained at Bergen from 1961 to 1972 During this time his own work developed in two key ways First he developed research projects inside Norway and published a study entitled The Role of the Entrepreneur in Social Change in Northern Norway in 1963 Second he began writing more purely theoretical works that secured his international reputation within anthropology These included Models of Social Organization 1966 and especially the small edited volume Ethnic Groups and Boundaries The Social Organization of Cultural Difference 1969 Barth s introduction to Ethnic Groups and Boundaries became his most well known essay and ended up among the top 100 on the social science citation index for a number of years 4 10 In 1974 Barth moved to Oslo where he became professor of social anthropology and the head of the city s Museum of Cultural History During this period anthropology was changing Marxism and interpretive approaches were becoming more central while Barth s focus on strategy and choice was being taken up by economics and related disciplines 4 9 Barth shifted to studying meaning and ritual as developed in ethnic groups and conducted research in Papua New Guinea where he conducted fieldwork with the Baktaman He published several works from these studies namely the Ritual and Knowledge among the Baktaman of New Guinea 1975 He also continued studies in the Middle East conducting fieldwork in Oman with his wife Unni Wikan This resulted in his 1983 volume Sohar Culture and Society in an Omani Town Barth received a state scholarship from the Norwegian government in 1985 He left the country to accept two positions in the United States at Emory University from 1989 to 1996 and Boston University from 1997 to 2008 6 7 By this time Barth and his wife felt we had both done our share of physically strenuous fieldwork and decided to begin an ethnographic project in Bali 4 14 He developed an interest in the anthropology of knowledge at around this time an interest which he explored in his book Balinese Worlds 1993 More recently he has also conducted research in Bhutan Barth was a member of the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters 7 In 1997 he was elected a Foreign Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences 8 Personal life EditBarth was married 1949 1972 to Mary Molly Allee 27 April 1926 December 1998 9 and he was married again 30 January 1974 to Unni Wikan professor of social anthropology at the University of Oslo Norway 6 7 His sister Tone Barth 25 January 1924 10 October 1980 was married 1945 1963 to Terkel Rosenqvist 1921 2011 also an academic 10 and she was married again in 1963 to the Norwegian politician for the Conservative Party Vidkunn Hveding 1921 2001 Barth died in Norway on 24 January 2016 at the age of 87 11 Main ideas and contributions EditHe was well known among anthropologists for his Transactionalism analysis of political processes in the Swat Valley of northern Pakistan and his study of micro economic processes and entrepreneurship in the area of Darfur in Sudan The latter has been regarded as a classical example of formalist analysis in economic anthropology During his long career Barth has also published acclaimed studies based on field works in Bali New Guinea and several countries in the Middle East thematically covering a wide array of subjects 2 Ethnicity Edit Barth has been an influential scholar on the subject of ethnicity Andreas Wimmer wrote in 2008 The comparative study of ethnicity rests firmly on the ground established by Fredrik Barth in his well known 1969 introduction to a collection of ethnographic case studies 12 As the editor of Ethnic Groups and Boundaries 1969 Barth outlined an approach to the study of ethnicity that focused on the ongoing negotiations of boundaries between groups of people Barth s view was that such groups were not discontinuous cultural isolates or logical a prioris to which people naturally belong Barth parted with anthropological notions of cultures as bounded entities and ethnicity as primordial bonds He focused on the interface and interaction between groups that gave rise to identities 2 Ethnic Groups and Boundaries which he edited concentrates on the interconnections of ethnic identities Barth writes in his introduction p 9 categorical ethnic distinctions do not depend on an absence of mobility contact and information but do entail social processes of exclusion and incorporation whereby discrete categories are maintained despite changing participation and membership in the course of individual life histories He emphasizes the use by groups of categories i e ethnic labels that usually endure even when individual members move across boundaries or share an identity with people in more than one group The inter dependency of ethnic groups is a pivotal argument throughout both the introduction and the following chapters As interdependent ethnic identities are the product of continuous so called ascription Cf Ascriptive inequality and self ascription Barth stresses the interactional perspective of social anthropology on the level of the persons involved instead of on a socio structural level Ethnic identity becomes and is maintained through relational processes of inclusion and exclusion 2 Literature EditBiographiesLewis Herbert S 2017 L anthropologue nomade Biographie intellectuelle de Frederik Barth in BEROSE International Encyclopaedia of the Histories of Anthropology Paris Thomas Hylland Eriksen Fredrik Barth An intellectual biography University of Chicago Press 2015 ISBN 9780745335360Selected bibliographyBalinese worlds Chicago University of Chicago Press 1993 ISBN 0 226 03833 5 Cosmologies in the making a generative approach to cultural variation in inner New Guinea Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1987 ISBN 0 521 34279 1 Sohar culture and society in an Omani town Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press 1983 ISBN 0 8018 2840 6 Ritual and knowledge among the Baktaman of New Guinea Oslo Universitetsforlaget 1975 ISBN 0 300 01816 9 Ethnic groups and boundaries The social organization of culture difference Oslo Universitetsforlaget 1969 ISBN 978 0 04 572019 4 Reissued Long Grove IL Waveland Press 1998 Models of social organization London Royal Anthropological Institute 1966 Nomads of South Persia the Basseri tribe of the Khamseh Confederacy Oslo Universitetsforlaget 1962 Political leadership among Swat Pathans London The Athlone Press 1959 References Edit a b Rosvold Knut A 9 August 2012 Fredrik Barth Biography Store Norske Leksikon in Norwegian Kunnskapsforlaget Retrieved 27 October 2013 a b c d Siverts Henning 13 February 2009 Fredrik Barth Extended Biography Norsk Biografisk Leksikon in Norwegian Kunnskapsforlaget Retrieved 27 October 2013 Jenkins Richard 2016 Fredrik Barth an ethnographer s ethnographer and a theorist s theorist Fredrik Barth an ethnographer s ethnographer and a theorist s theorist Nations and Nationalism 22 3 411 414 doi 10 1111 nana 12231 a b c d e f g Barth Fredrik 2007 Overview Sixty Years of Anthropology Annual Review of Anthropology 36 1 16 doi 10 1146 annurev anthro 36 081406 094407 Anderson Astrid 2012 Fredrik Barth A Bibliography Oslo Universitetsbiblioteket Oslo p 7 a b Anderson Astrid 2012 Fredrik Barth A Bibliography Oslo Universitetsbiblioteket i Oslo Gruppe 2 Kulturfag og estetiske fag in Norwegian Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters Archived from the original on 27 September 2011 Retrieved 28 October 2009 Book of Members 1780 2010 Chapter B PDF American Academy of Arts and Sciences Retrieved 18 May 2011 Siverts Henning 13 February 2009 Fredrik Barth Extended Biography Norsk Biografisk Leksikon in Norwegian Oslo Kunnskapsforlaget Retrieved 27 October 2013 Steenstrup Bjorn ed 1973 Rosenqvist Terkel Hvem er hvem in Norwegian Oslo Aschehoug p 470 Retrieved 2 June 2011 Fredrik Barth er dod www dn no Wimmer Andreas 2008 The Making and Unmaking of Ethnic Boundaries A Multilevel Process Theory American Journal of Sociology 113 4 970 1022 doi 10 1086 522803 ISSN 0002 9602 S2CID 3178127 External links Edit Norway portalLos grupos etnicos y sus fronteras Introduccion in Spanish Los Pathanes su identidad y conservacion in Spanish Barth Fredrik born 1928 Entry in the AnthroBase Online Dictionary of Anthropology video interview of Fredrik Barth from Alan Macfarlane s FILMS OF ANTHROPOLOGICAL AND OTHER ANCESTORS Overview Sixty Years in Anthropology by Fredrik Barth permanent dead link Resources related to research BEROSE International Encyclopaedia of the Histories of Anthropology Barth Fredrik 1928 2016 Paris 2017 ISSN 2648 2770 Bergen Open Research Archive permanent dead link Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fredrik Barth amp oldid 1133197996, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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