Academic appointments can bring forth unexpected and unforeseen contests and tensions, cause humiliation and embarrassment for unsuccessful applicants and reveal unexpected allies and enemies. It is also a time when harsh assessments can be made about colleagues’ intellectual abilities and their capacity as a scholar and fieldworker. The assessors’ reports were often disturbingly personal, laying bare their likes and dislikes that could determine the futures of peers and colleagues. Chicanery deals with how the founding Chairs at Sydney, the Australian National University, Auckland and Western Australia dealt with this process, and includes accounts of the appointments of influential anthropologists such as Raymond Firth and Alexander Ratcliffe-Brown.
Tabla de materias
Prologue
Acknowledgements
List of Abbreviations
Introduction
Chapter 1. Establishing Social Anthropology in the Antipodes
Chapter 2. Anthropology at Sydney: A.R. Radcliffe-Brown and A.P. Elkin
Chapter 3. Australasian Anthropology and the Second World War
Chapter 4. ‘A Matter of Reproach to New Zealand’: Auckland University College, 1949
Chapter 5. ‘The Brightest of His Generation’: Siegfried Frederick Nadel, Foundation Professor of Anthropology, the Australian National University
Chapter 6. Finding a Successor to A.P. Elkin, 1955
Chapter 7. Expansion: Anthropology at the University of Western Australia
Chapter 8. A Successor to S.F. Nadel
Chapter 9. Sydney Again
Conclusion
Epilogue
References
Index
Sobre el autor
Christine Winter is Associate Professor at the College of the Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences, Flinders University (Adelaide). Their most recent co-authored book is Scholars at War (ANU Press, 2012).