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ANTHROPOLOGY AND HUMANISM
VOLUME 10, NUMBER
1 FEBRUARY 1985
EDITORS
Editor, Miles Richardson, Louisiana State University
Managing Editor, Linda Long McQueen
Art Director, Mary Lee Eggart
Editorial Assistant, Maria Cashion
Associate Editors
M. Jill Brody, Louisiana State University
Bruce Grindal, Florida State University
Gregory Reck, Appalachian State University
Book Review Editor
Nancy J. Schmidt, Indiana University
ADVISORY BOARD
Gerald D. Berreman, University of California, Berkeley
David Bidney, Indiana University (Retired)
Ivan A. Brady, State University of New York at Oswego
Johnetta B. Cole, University of Massachusetts
Francis L. K. Hsu, University of San Francisco
Norris Brock Johnson, University of North Carolina
Arden King, Tulane University
Gilbert Kushner, University of South Florida
L. L. Langness, University of California, Los Angeles
Alfred McClung Lee, City University of New York
Brooklyn
Bob Scholte, University of Amsterdam
Robert F. Spencer, University of Minnesota
George Stocking, University of Chicago
Marea Teski, Stockton State College
Colin M. Turnbull, George Washington University
Dennis M. Warren, Iowa State University
Stanley Wilk, Lycoming College
Valentine Winsey, Pace University
Coypright c 1984 by the Society for Humanistic Anthropology, American
Anthropological Association, 1703 New Hampshire Ave., N.W., Washington,
D.C. 20009. All rights reserved. The mandala on the cover is after a
Shri-Yantra meditation pattern from Buddhist ritual (see also) Sybil
Monoly-Nagy’s Matrix of Man published in 1968 by Praeger, New York).
CONTENTS
An Untrue Store
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Douglas Uzzell 3
A Tribute to a Fellow Texan 6
Why A Yellow Ribbon?
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D. W. Ingersoll 7
Sculpting Americans
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Robert Ascher 16
Poems 18
Book Reviews 19
HUMANISTIC ANTHROPOLOGY
Humanism has historically made the human endeavor
the subject of its concerns. Humanistic Anthropology
seeks to bring the intellectual resources of the discipline to bear upon this subject. While not blind to
the constraints within which we humans operate, humanistic anthropology,
in the tradition of the discipline celebrates that human reality is one that we
creative primates construct. Accordingly, it recognizes that anthropological inquiry constitutes a part of that
construct; it also recognizes that anthropological inquiry contributes both to an understanding of the
humans and in anthropology. The society meets annually with the American Anthropological Association.
Original art by Mary Lee Eggart
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