22 May 2026

9th HOAN-Meeting: A New Look at the History of American Anthropology

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 Despite the rapid development of the historiography of anthropology, the image of “pre-posts” American anthropology is as servants of colonialism who “extracted” information from indigenous peoples and published works causing them harm. The critique of the field that grew first from the crises of the 1960s (the war in Vietnam, civil rights movement, the end of colonialism) has grown through the decades with so many forms of critique that the actual historic record has been lost and been replaced by mythology. There are few theory or history courses today that correct these myths, at best devoting a few sessions to “Boas, Benedict, Mead.”  This talk will draw on some chapters of my recent book, Correcting the Record: Essays on the History of American Anthropology (2025) stressing American anthropology’s role (in the United States) as the scholarly discipline that rejected ideas of racial determinism and the inferiority of “primitive peoples” that had been established in both the public mind and previous “science.” It was the field that insisted on the value of ways of life that were very different, and produced irreplaceable ethnographic studies for both the descendants of the people studied and humanity at large.

Program

17:00: Welcome by HOAN convenors, Hande Birkalan-Gedik, Katja Geisenhainer, Udo Mischek and Marko Pišev

17:05: Keynote speaker: Herbert S. Lewis, University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Title: A New Look at the History of American Anthropology

17:30: Open forum for questions and comments

17:45:   A new History of Anthropology stakeholder:  IUAES – CHOA. Presentation by Celso Castro (Chair) and Frederico Delgado Rosa (Deputy Chair)

17:55: Open forum for questions and comments

18:00: Presentation of HOAN flagged panels at EASA 2026 – Poznań by HOAN Conveners

18: 15: Closing and farewell words by HOAN convenors

Speakers

Herbert Lewis

Herbert Lewis studied anthropology at Brandeis and Columbia Universities in the 1950s. His first fieldwork was in Ethiopia (1958-60, 1965-66); one result: Jimma Abba Jifar: An Oromo Monarchy (orig. 1965). With his primary interest in political anthropology, cultural change, and ethnicity, his next fieldwork was with Jews from Yemen in Israel (1975-77; 1987): After the Eagles Landed: The Yemenites of Israel (1989). He was fortunate to become connected to and write about a Wisconsin Indian group (Oneida Lives: Long-Lost Voices of Wisconsin Oneidas, 2005) and since then most of his research and writing has been about the history of anthropology. He is the author of In Defense of Anthropology: An Investigation of the Critique of Anthropology (2014) and is currently completing a book about the founder of modern American anthropology, Franz Boas.