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![]() Valuing the Self What We Can Learn from Other Cultures
Dorothy Lee
Full of contemporary, relevant commentary and
anthropological insight, this collection of provocative philosophical and
psychological essays discusses general principles and specific ways to generate
positive learning and development of individuals in communities and societies.
The book sensitively and clearly distinguishes thought and behavior in primitive
cultures, as well as raises questions and offers answers as to how the
individual might be nurtured and taught to enjoy life with greater personal
fulfillment, to engage others and to be engaged by them, and to live life to its
fullest potential. Through comparative analysis of numerous cultures both
Western and primitive, Lee suggests that in order for the individual to achieve
autonomy (defined as “being in charge of myself”) it is essential that the
community (defined as “people around me”) truly value the self.
Lee’s work holds
that learning from other cultures and valuing their significance and worth are
more central to what the discipline of anthropology is and should be about. In
both the teaching and practice of anthropology, according to Lee, “what we can
learn from other cultures” and apply to ourselves and our own world is precisely
what gives meaning and value to the pursuit of anthropology as an academic
discipline. Valuing the Self essentially captures the essence of
anthropology’s humanistic potential while simultaneously providing a rich and
accurate sense of what life and culture are about in small-scale traditional
societies. Lee’s presentation of life in primitive cultures attacks the essence
of the ethnocentric myth that human beings are necessarily better off in modern
cultures. $12.95 list, 87 pages 10-digit ISBN: 0-88133-229-1 13-digit ISBN: 978-0-88133-229-2 © 1976 Table of Contents
Prologue: Valuing Dorothy Lee (Jeffrey Ehrenreich) Introduction 1. Culture and the Experience of Value 2. Autonomous Motivation 3. Autonomy and Community 4. What Price Literacy? 5. Developing the Potential to Learn 6. Freedom and Social Constraint 7. To Be or Not To Be: Notes on the Meaning of Maternity |