PAUL RADIN (1883-1959) was an American cultural anthropologist and writer of folklore. He conducted years of fieldwork among the Winnebago in order to complete The Winnebago Tribe in 1923, and in 1929 he published A Grammar of the Wappo Language. The Trickster (1956) is his most renowned publication, and includes essays by Karl Kerenyi and Carl Jung. NENI PANOURGIA is a writer, translator, professor of anthropology at the New School School for Social Research, and Director of the program Health as a Human Right at the Institute for the Study of Human Rights at Columbia University. She is the author of Dangerous Citizens: The Greek Left and the Terror of the State. She lives in New York City.
"""[Primitive Man as Philosopher] did more than any other [book] to dispel the mischievous notion that human beings in small, technologically simple cultures exist at a dead level of uniformity and conformity. New York Herald Tribune Excellent. Nature (London) A significant addition to the body of work that deals with the nature of religion. The New Republic By linking modes of thought and conduct with social types, Radin developed some leads towards a social anthropology of knowledge. -- Edward Rose American Sociological A minor masterpiece of the Americanist tradition. -- Regna Darnell By skillful use of texts from native informants and his own colorful prose, I believe [Radin] succeeds well enough so that the book is a landmark...[Radin] is a fertile and imaginative scholar who can be infuriating but never dull...full of rich ideas. -- Evon Z. Vogt American Anthropologist Radin's approach to anthropology [was widespread], ranging from culture, ritual, myth and religion, to history, social theory, law and language. -- Folklore E.O. James"