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BIRKENMAIER, ANKE. The Specter of Races: Latin American Anthropology and Literature between the Wars. U of Virginia P, 2016. 224 pp.
Professor Birkenmaier, a literary scholar at Indiana University's Department of Spanish and Portuguese, sets out in The Specter of Races to tell the story of the academic discipline of anthropology in Latin America during the interwar years. The chronology she invokes to frame her inquiry might seem counterintuitive. It refers to the two major international armed conflicts in the first half of the twentieth century in which the leading Western powers militarily wrought the havoc of carnage against one another, the events known in historiographical convention as "World War I" (1914-1918) and "World War II" (1939-1945). Here the choice of a temporality drawn írom events involving European nations-and belatedly the United States-as a proper frame for examining a phenomenon pertinent to Latin American scholarship gets explained implicitly by the transnational networks, intercultural exchange, and routes of scholarly collaboration that stand out as emphases in The Specter of Races.
Consisting of a short introduction, four chapters, and a brief epilogue, the volume maps the trajectories of key individual authors with their corresponding circuits of relations. The main figures are social scientists with a measure of artistic flair: the Cuban Fernando Ortiz, the French anthropologist Paul Rivet, the Haitian literary artist and ethnologist Jacques Roumain, and the Brazilian human science scholar Gilberto Freyre. The study brings them together on the grounds of their shared qualities as intellectual leaders distinguished for the roles they played in the establishment of distinct anthropological practices in the countries where they operated. They exerted their measure of influence by disseminating their thought through the books they penned, the vibrant communities of knowledge of which they formed part, the institutions they built (museums, research institutes, university-based academic departments), and the specialized scholarly journals they edited. Participating in wider networks of learned peers beyond their countries of civic belonging, as thinkers they "coalesced around key concepts, such as race (but, more important, anti-racism), culture, language, and transculturation" (16). Birkenmaier identifies them as Latin Americanists "who came of age in the interwar period" and who concerned themselves with two "open questions: how cultural contact had affected societies over time and in what way history...