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Problems of Integrating Humanities and Social Science Approaches in Far Eastern Studies

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 March 2011

Felix M. Keesing
Affiliation:
Stanford University
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Extract

One of the most encouraging trends in contemporary scholarship is the considerable raprochment between fields of study conventionally classed as the “humanities” and those called the “social sciences,” or now fashionably, “behavioral sciences.” A strong contributing factor here has been the growth, especially during and since World War II, of so-called “area” studies which focus various disciplinary and interdisciplinary approaches upon a region. Furthermore, the region which has constituted perhaps the most active front for such experiments in coordination is the Far East.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Association for Asian Studies, Inc. 1955

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References

* The author is Professor of Anthropology. This paper is based upon Professor Keesing's Presidential Address to the Far Eastern Association at its 1954 Annual Meeting. The address was given at a joint meeting of the Association and the American Oriental Society at Columbia University, New York, as part of Columbia's bicentennial celebrations.