Difference between revisions of "Harry Turney-High"
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| image = File:Turney-High,_Harry.jpg | | image = File:Turney-High,_Harry.jpg | ||
| − | | birth_date = | + | | birth_date = 1899 |
| − | | death_date = | + | | death_date = 1982 |
| − | | address = State University of Montana | + | | address = Dept. of Economics and Sociology, State University of Montana, Missoula, Montana, USA |
| occupation = | | occupation = | ||
| elected_ESL = | | elected_ESL = | ||
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=== House Notes === | === House Notes === | ||
| − | proposed by Ralph Linton, seconded by H.J. Braunholtz | + | 1934.11.20 proposed by Ralph Linton, seconded by H.J. Braunholtz |
=== Notes From Elsewhere === | === Notes From Elsewhere === | ||
| − | + | Harry Holbert Turney-High (1899-1982)[1] was an American anthropologist and author who studied primitive war and conflict. He was a professor of anthropology at University of South Carolina and also a colonel in the military police in the United States Army Reserve.[2] He based his theory on the concept of military horizon, which is the point where a society evolves from a primitive form of war towards a more complex one. This evolution depends not only on traditionally studied mechanism, such us climate or access to resources, but mainly on the organizational ability of any given society.[3] | |
== Publications == | == Publications == | ||
=== External Publications === | === External Publications === | ||
| − | + | Primitive War: Its Practices and Concepts (South Carolina: University of South Carolina Press, 2nd edition (1991)) ISBN 0-872-49196-X<br />The Military: The Theory of Land Warfare As Behavioral Science ([Christopher Pub House] ; (1981)) ISBN 0-815-80403-2<br />Ethnography of the Kutenai. American Anthropological Association. 1941. (reprinted 1998, Ye Galleon Press: ISBN 9780877706786) | |
=== House Publications === | === House Publications === | ||
Revision as of 22:48, 28 May 2020
| Harry Turney-High | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| File:Turney-High, Harry.jpg | |||||
| Born | 1899 | ||||
| Died | 1982 | ||||
| Residence | Dept. of Economics and Sociology, State University of Montana, Missoula, Montana, USA | ||||
| |||||
Contents
Notes
Office Notes
House Notes
1934.11.20 proposed by Ralph Linton, seconded by H.J. Braunholtz
Notes From Elsewhere
Harry Holbert Turney-High (1899-1982)[1] was an American anthropologist and author who studied primitive war and conflict. He was a professor of anthropology at University of South Carolina and also a colonel in the military police in the United States Army Reserve.[2] He based his theory on the concept of military horizon, which is the point where a society evolves from a primitive form of war towards a more complex one. This evolution depends not only on traditionally studied mechanism, such us climate or access to resources, but mainly on the organizational ability of any given society.[3]
Publications
External Publications
Primitive War: Its Practices and Concepts (South Carolina: University of South Carolina Press, 2nd edition (1991)) ISBN 0-872-49196-X
The Military: The Theory of Land Warfare As Behavioral Science ([Christopher Pub House] ; (1981)) ISBN 0-815-80403-2
Ethnography of the Kutenai. American Anthropological Association. 1941. (reprinted 1998, Ye Galleon Press: ISBN 9780877706786)