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Who Taught Marx, Engels and Morgan about Australian Aborigines?

Spriggs Matthew. 1997. .
Who Taught Marx, Engels and Morgan about Australian Aborigines?
ARTICLE, (1997 ) - SUBMITTEDVERSION - English (en-GB)

OPENACCESS - .
Audience : RESEARCHERS, STUDENTS, POLICYMAKERS
Harwood Academic Publishers
Subject
Australian Aborigines, Social Evolutionary Theory, Marx and Engels, L.H. Morgan, Anthropological Influences, Western Thought, Ethnographic Literature, Socialism and Anthropology, Historical Context, Ideological Influences
Domains
Sociologie, Archéologie, Anthropologie, Ethnologie, Sciences Sociales, Sciences humaines
Description

The paper explores the origins of ideas about Australian Aborigines as the archetypal "natural men" in nineteenth-century Western thought. These notions are primarily derived from a specific group of texts that had a profound influence on social evolutionary theory, impacting figures like Marx, Engels, and Morgan. The paper delves into the context and content of these foundational texts to understand the origins and nature of these ideas. It particularly focuses on Marx, Engels, and Morgan, who collectively contributed to a significant strain of social evolutionary theory that continues to impact modern archaeologists and anthropologists, especially in socialist countries. The discussion is structured around key works, examining Marx and Engels' writings before encountering Morgan's work, Morgan's utilization of Australian Aboriginal ethnography, Marx's consideration of anthropological sources, and Engels' use of the same sources.

Keywords
Language
English (en-GB)
Creators
Spriggs, Matthew
Contributors
Sources
History and Anthropology 10(2-3):185-218.
Coverage
Australia
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