An Anthropology of Everyday Life: An Autobiography

An Anthropology of Everyday Life: An Autobiography

by Edward T. Hall
     
 

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In 1959, a groundbreaking study of nonverbal communication, The Silent Language, was published to international acclaim. Written by Edward T. Hall, a cultural anthropologist, it was one of the first books to examine the complex ways people communicate with one another without speaking. More than thirty years later, The Silent Language has never been out of print, has… See more details below

Overview

In 1959, a groundbreaking study of nonverbal communication, The Silent Language, was published to international acclaim. Written by Edward T. Hall, a cultural anthropologist, it was one of the first books to examine the complex ways people communicate with one another without speaking. More than thirty years later, The Silent Language has never been out of print, has been translated into several languages, has sold more than 1.5 million copies in the U.S., and remains the definitive book in its field. Today, Ned Hall is a world-renowned expert in intercultural communication, sought after by government agencies, businesses and universities throughout the world for his expertise in interpreting the hidden meanings behind what people are saying to one another. Now, in a remarkably candid and personal book, he tells the story of the first fifty years of his fascinating life. Although it began inauspiciously when he was virtually abandoned by his parents to the care of others, his early exposure to diverse cultures started him on his path toward decoding the deeper, hidden layers of human behavior. By the time he was in his early twenties, he had lived in Missouri, New Mexico, France, Germany and on Indian reservations in the Southwest. Building dams with the Hopi and Navajo, he began to realize the very deep differences in these two dissimilar cultures and our own as to how each viewed time, space, bargains and other aspects of daily communication. While serving in the army during World War II, he perceived how the formal army culture differed from the informal one, adding further weight to the new theories he was developing. Working for the State Department under President Truman, he trained foreign service officers who were being sent to underdeveloped countries. Hall's message to them--that there were profound disparities in the attitudes of different cultures toward time, space and relationships--was considered almost heretical at the time. Today, Hall's books

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Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly
Anthropologist Hall turns his analytic eye on the first 50 years of his life, beginning in 1914, and measures the impact of his particular cultural experiences on the person he became. (Mar.)
Library Journal - Library Journal
In this autobiography of one of the most influential anthropologists of the last 30 years, Hall writes with the clarity and easygoing grace that have made his books popular with readers who eschew the jargon and statistics that clutter some social science books. Hall recounts many of the unusual events that shaped his outlook, from living in the Santa Fe artists' colony to working on Indian reservations in Arizona and serving with a black army regiment in World War II. A theme that reappears throughout the book is Hall's sincere efforts toward understanding other cultures systematically thwarted by an unsympathetic bureaucracy. Hall only succeeds in breaking through the bureaucratic barrier after he overcomes his own personal barriers during seven years of psychoanalysis. While quite engaging, this book may not be as useful to students and professionals as Hall's other works that help to explore our understanding of intercultural communication. For larger academic and public library collections.-- Eric Hinsdale, Simmons Coll. Graduate Sch. of Management Lib., Boston

Product Details

ISBN-13:
9780385237437
Publisher:
Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
Publication date:
02/01/1993
Edition description:
1st Anchor Books ed
Pages:
304
Product dimensions:
5.18(w) x 7.97(h) x 0.70(d)

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