Anthropological Intelligence: The Deployment and Neglect of American Anthropology in the Second World War

Передня обкладинка
Duke University Press, 9 черв. 2008 р. - 394 стор.
By the time the United States officially entered World War II, more than half of American anthropologists were using their professional knowledge and skills to advance the war effort. The range of their war-related work was extraordinary. They helped gather military intelligence, pinpointed possible social weaknesses in enemy nations, and contributed to the army’s regional Pocket Guide booklets. They worked for dozens of government agencies, including the Office of Strategic Services (OSS) and the Office of War Information. At a moment when social scientists are once again being asked to assist in military and intelligence work, David H. Price examines anthropologists’ little-known contributions to the Second World War.

Anthropological Intelligence is based on interviews with anthropologists as well as extensive archival research involving many Freedom of Information Act requests. Price looks at the role played by the two primary U.S. anthropological organizations, the American Anthropological Association and the Society for Applied Anthropology (which was formed in 1941), in facilitating the application of anthropological methods to the problems of war. He chronicles specific projects undertaken on behalf of government agencies, including an analysis of the social effects of postwar migration, the design and implementation of OSS counterinsurgency campaigns, and the study of Japanese social structures to help tailor American propaganda efforts. Price discusses anthropologists’ work in internment camps, their collection of intelligence in Central and South America for the FBI’s Special Intelligence Service, and their help forming foreign language programs to assist soldiers and intelligence agents. Evaluating the ethical implications of anthropological contributions to World War II, Price suggests that by the time the Cold War began, the profession had set a dangerous precedent regarding what it would be willing to do on behalf of the U.S. government.

 

Вибрані сторінки

Зміст

One American Anthropology and the War to End All Wars
1
Two Professional Associations and the Scope of American Anthropologys Wartime Applications
18
Three Allied and Axis Anthropologies
53
Four The War on Campus
74
Five American Anthropologists Join the Wartime Brain Trust
91
Six Anthropologists and White House War Projects
117
Anthropologists and the War Relocation Authority
143
Eight Anthropology and Nihonjinron at the Office of War Information
171
Nine Archaeology and J Edgar Hoovers Special Intelligence Service
200
Weaponizing Anthropology at the oss
220
Looking Back at the War
262
Notes
283
Bibliography
317
Index
353
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Про автора (2008)

David H. Price is Associate Professor of Anthropology at Saint Martin’s University in Lacey, Washington. He is the author of Threatening Anthropology: McCarthyism and the FBI’s Surveillance of Activist Anthropologists, also published by Duke University Press. He was a member of the American Anthropological Association’s 2006–7 Ad Hoc Commission on the Engagement of Anthropology with the U.S. Security and Intelligence Communities.

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