The rise of Social Anthropology in South Africa: a female lineage against segregation

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The first British Commonwealth Chair in Social Anthropology was inaugurated at the University of Cavo City, University of Cape Town (UCT), by the British anthropologist Alfred Radcliffe-Brown, in 1921. Situated in South Africa prior to apartheid, it emerged in opposition to the regime racist exception established in 1948. The objective of the conference is to give intelligibility to social and power relations immersed in a complex geopolitical fabric, beyond the colony/metropolis duality, which reconfigures the issues of segregation, race and gender, in a time and specific spaces, conforming the boundaries of the anthropology then practiced.

 

Registration: http://bit.ly/conferencia_agosto21

 

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