
Against the Grain
The Vayda Tradition in Human Ecology and Ecological Anthropology
AltaMira Press
Published on 17. January 2008
Book
Hardback
392 pages
978-0-7591-1172-1 (ISBN)
Description
To rise to the increasingly urgent challenge of understanding the relationship between human beings and the environment, scholars need to step back and re-evaluate their basic premises about how current explanations should shape the form and content of their research. Against the Grain addresses a variety of topics in the field of human ecology, including ecological anthropology, evolutionary psychology, environmental history, and geography, and challenges scholars to re-think the adequacy of their methods and assumptions. Andrew P. Vayda concludes the volume with a critical commentary on these issues and, more widely, on the subject of explanation. The result is an extremely useful and provocative precis for thinking about, re-evaluating, and rectifying scholarly research.
Reviews / Votes
Against the Grain provides an admirable survey of Vayda's career, shows some interesting extensions and applications of his ideas, and provides an elaborated critique of contrasting views in human ecology and ecological anthropology. I recommend this book to all who explore human environment relationships and those economic botanists who wish to explore why questions in their study of plant use. * Economic Botany * This is an excellent volume. Its strength lies in providing an intellectual history of an eminent anthropologist and a partial understanding of his influence on scholars and on anthropological theory, methodology, and practice over a considerable number of years. * Current Anthropology * . . . An excellent volume . . . Its strength lies in providing an intellectual history of an eminent anthropologist and a partial understanding of his influence on scholars and on anthropological theory, methodology, and practice over a considerable number of years. * Current Anthropology * The volume is a resource that is likely to be referenced frequently by researchers and individual chapters will provide excellent reading material for courses in ecological anthropology. * Human Ecology * In a world of enormous socio-environmental complexity, perhaps the most laudable intellectual position is one of rigorous humility. The works in this volume are compelling tributes to such an approach, providing sober, meticulous, and powerful explanations, all of which urge against over-simple generalization and a priori assumptions, which too often blur our understanding of the environmental changes around us. The Vayda tradition is alive and well, and we would all do well to heed its lessons. -- Paul Robbins, University of Wisconsin-Madison Against the Grain provides an admirable survey of Vayda's career, shows some interesting extensions and applications of his ideas, and provides an elaborated critique of contrasting views in human ecology and ecological anthropology. I recommend this book to all who explore human environment relationships and those economic botanists who wish to explore "why" questions in their study of plant use. * Economic Botany *More details
Language
English
Place of publication
California
United States
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 240 mm
Width: 161 mm
Thickness: 26 mm
Weight
754 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-7591-1172-1 (9780759111721)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Bradley B. Walters is associate professor of geography & environment at Mount Allison University in Sackville, New Brunswick. Bonnie J. McCay is Board of Governors Distinguished Service Professor at Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey, in the Department of Human Ecology. Paige West is assistant professor of anthropology at Barnard College, New York. Susan Lees is professor emerita of anthropology at Hunter College and the Graduate Center of the City University of New York.
Content
Chapter 1 Introduction
Part 2 Part I. Introductory Essays
Chapter 3 Chapter 1. An Intellectual History of Ecological Anthropology
Chapter 4 Chapter 2. Maori Warfare: Prefiguring Contemporary Directions in Ecological Science
Part 5 Part II. Events Causes and Explanations
Chapter 6 Chapter 3. Explaining Causes in Evolving Contexts: From Nepali Hill Farmers to Business Managers in Thailand
Chapter 7 Chapter 4. Events, Politics, and Environmental Change
Chapter 8 Chapter 5. Orthodoxy and Revision in West African Guinea Savanna Ecology
Chapter 9 Chapter 6. Looking for Cause with All the Small Changes: Using Event Ecology to Find Human Causes of Biological Invasions
Chapter 10 Chapter 7. Shell Games on the Water Bottoms of Louisiana: Investigative Journalism and Anthropological Inquiry
Chapter 11 Chapter 8. Process in an Eventful Environment
Chapter 12 Chapter 9. A New Guinea Culture-Bound Syndrome Revisited: Humility and Monological Authority in Anthropology
Chapter 13 Chapter 10. Deductive-nomological vs. Causal-mechanistic Explanation: Relative Strengths and Weaknesses in Anthropological Explanation
Chapter 14 Chapter 11. Vayda Blues: Explanation in Darwinian Ecological Anthropology
Part 15 Part III. Research on Environment and Development
Chapter 16 Chapter 12. What Kind of Anthropology for Successful Conservation Management and Development?
Chapter 17 Chapter 13. Environmental Conservation and Social Life in Papua New Guinea
Chapter 18 Chapter 14. The Concept of Human Agency in Contemporary Conservation and Development Discourse
Chapter 19 Chapter 15. Using Progressive Contextualization to Understand a Rural Development Success Story in Indonesian Borneo
Chapter 20 Chapter 16. From Understanding to Action: Building on Anthropological Approaches to Influence Policymaking
Chapter 21 Chapter 17. The Relevant Context: Environmental Consequences of Images of the Future
Chapter 22 Chapter 18. Indigenous Knowledge and In Situ Crop Germplasm Conservation
Part 23 Part IV. Concluding Essay
Chapter 24 Chapter 19. Causal Explanation as a Research Goal: A Pragmatic View
Part 2 Part I. Introductory Essays
Chapter 3 Chapter 1. An Intellectual History of Ecological Anthropology
Chapter 4 Chapter 2. Maori Warfare: Prefiguring Contemporary Directions in Ecological Science
Part 5 Part II. Events Causes and Explanations
Chapter 6 Chapter 3. Explaining Causes in Evolving Contexts: From Nepali Hill Farmers to Business Managers in Thailand
Chapter 7 Chapter 4. Events, Politics, and Environmental Change
Chapter 8 Chapter 5. Orthodoxy and Revision in West African Guinea Savanna Ecology
Chapter 9 Chapter 6. Looking for Cause with All the Small Changes: Using Event Ecology to Find Human Causes of Biological Invasions
Chapter 10 Chapter 7. Shell Games on the Water Bottoms of Louisiana: Investigative Journalism and Anthropological Inquiry
Chapter 11 Chapter 8. Process in an Eventful Environment
Chapter 12 Chapter 9. A New Guinea Culture-Bound Syndrome Revisited: Humility and Monological Authority in Anthropology
Chapter 13 Chapter 10. Deductive-nomological vs. Causal-mechanistic Explanation: Relative Strengths and Weaknesses in Anthropological Explanation
Chapter 14 Chapter 11. Vayda Blues: Explanation in Darwinian Ecological Anthropology
Part 15 Part III. Research on Environment and Development
Chapter 16 Chapter 12. What Kind of Anthropology for Successful Conservation Management and Development?
Chapter 17 Chapter 13. Environmental Conservation and Social Life in Papua New Guinea
Chapter 18 Chapter 14. The Concept of Human Agency in Contemporary Conservation and Development Discourse
Chapter 19 Chapter 15. Using Progressive Contextualization to Understand a Rural Development Success Story in Indonesian Borneo
Chapter 20 Chapter 16. From Understanding to Action: Building on Anthropological Approaches to Influence Policymaking
Chapter 21 Chapter 17. The Relevant Context: Environmental Consequences of Images of the Future
Chapter 22 Chapter 18. Indigenous Knowledge and In Situ Crop Germplasm Conservation
Part 23 Part IV. Concluding Essay
Chapter 24 Chapter 19. Causal Explanation as a Research Goal: A Pragmatic View