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Морган Льюис Генри

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Всего
публикаций в библиотеке
: 7820
Аннотации
1-9
Морган Льюис Генри
http://ortlib.narod.ru/perso/perso103.htm
Классический труд «Древнее общество» (1877) посвящен вопросам возникновения семьи, собственности и родоплеменной организации. Исследовав быт и старинные обычаи индейцев, он пришел к идее рода как основной ячейки первобытного общества. Историю человечества М. разделил на два периода: ранний, когда общественный строй основывался на родах, фратриях и племенах, и поздний, когда общество стало территориальной, экономической и политической общностью. Только благодаря родовой организации - самому устойчивому и универсальному институту древнего общества - возможна преемственность развития культуры.
Морган Льюис Генри
http://www.countries.ru/library/culturologists/morgan.htm
известный американский историк и этнограф, один из родоначальников антропологии, этнологии и культурологии. Он был состоятельным человеком, ученым, адвокатом, 40 лет жизни посвятил изучению ирокезов и других индейских племен. Жизнь с индейцами внушила ему глубокое уважение к их самобытной культуре, которое позже он пытался привить американскому обществу, публично выступая в защиту «краснокожих». В качестве адвоката М. успешно отстаивал в суде право ирокезов на землю, за что был торжественно посвящен в члены индейского племени сенека.
Chapter 2. Victorians, Germans and a Frenchman
http://www.anthrobase.com/Txt/E/Eriksen_T_H_&_Nielsen_F_S_02.htm
Biological and Social Evolutionism - Morgan.
Marx.
Bastian, Tylor and Other Victorians.
The Golden Bough and the Torres Expedition.
Diffusionism.
The New Sociology.
Durkheim.
Weber.
Lewis H.Morgan Chapter NYSAA
http://www.morganchapter.com
The Lewis Henry Morgan Chapter was organized in 1916 and is the oldest Chapter in the New York State Archaeological Association. The Chapter is named after Lewis Henry Morgan, a former Rochester resident, who established the Indian Department at the New York State Museum in Albany, NY in 1849. Lewis Henry Morgan is known as one of the founders of the science of Anthropology. Although his research and books did touch upon archaeology, they were primarily ethnological in approach and content.
Lewis Henry Morgan
http://www2.truman.edu/~rgraber/cultev/morgan.html
The surprising facts that a few basic patterns occur over and over, and that each pattern has a logical structure of its own, were among the discoveries of Lewis Henry Morgan, a prosperous attorney who lived in 19th-century Rochester, New York. As a young man Morgan had taken great interest in the Iroquois Indians of New York, and in 1851 he published a book about them highly respected even today. His anthropological interests reached full flower, however, in his 1877 book, Ancient Society. To organize the growing body of knowledge about human cultures of the past and present, Morgan carefully defined three main cultural stages: savagery, barbarism, and civilization.
Lewis Henry Morgan
http://www.mnsu.edu/emuseum/information/biography/klmno/morgan_lewis_h ...
In a farmhouse a few miles south of Aurora, New York, Lewis Henry Morgan was born on November 21, 1818. He attended Cayuga Academy in Aurora and then attended Union College and graduated in 1840. He then returned to Aurora where he read law and studied the Classics of Ancient Greece and Rome. Morgan joined a young men's literary and social club and renamed it Grand Order of Iroquois. He even wrote a constitution to encourage a kinder feeling towards the Indians.
Lewis Henry Morgan Papers
http://www.lib.rochester.edu/rbk/MORGLH.STM
The papers of Lewis Henry Morgan (1818-1881), American anthropologist, were willed by Morgan to the University of Rochester. The Library has added to the collection by purchase and by the acquisition of photocopies of relevant material in other collections.
The papers include correspondence to and from Morgan, manuscripts of articles and speeches, manuscript notebooks and travel diaries, and the manuscripts of several of his books. Correspondents include Henry Adams, Adolph F. Bandelier, Charles Darwin, Joseph Henry, Francis Parkman, and Herbert Spencer.
Lewis Henry Morgan's Scheme for Social Evolution in Ancient Society
http://www.as.ua.edu/ant/Faculty/murphy/culture/Social%20Compexity%20C ...
The Lewis Henry Morgan Collection
http://www.nysm.nysed.gov/morgan/info.html
Bibliography.
Аннотации
1-9
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