Pathways of power. Building an anthropology of the modern world. By Eric Wolf. Edited by Sydel Silverman. Berkeley: University of California Press. 2001. 488 pp. $60.00. ISBN 0520 223330. Envisioning power. Ideologies of dominance and crisis. By Eric Wolf. Berkeley: University of California Press. 1999. 352 pp. $50.00. ISBN 0520 215362. Europe and the people without history. By Eric Wolf. Berkeley: University of California Press. 1992. 525 pp. $21.95. Pb.: ISBN 0520 048989.
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 30 April 2003
‘At this millennial transition, the human capacity to envision imaginary worlds seems to be shifting into high gear. For anthropologists and others, greater concern with how ideas and power converge seems eminently warranted.’
Eric R. Wolf, Envisioning power, 1999
The arrival in 1999 of Eric Wolf's last book Envisioning power. Ideologies of dominance and crisis generated much excitement. Long the standard bearer for political economy in anthropology and often credited with bringing Marxism to anthropology, Wolf had not published a major monograph since Europe and the people without history, which in 1982 defined Marxian anthropology. A very different book, in a very different time, Envisioning power represented Eric Wolf's attempt to highlight the importance of ideology in the exercise of power through looking at three societies in crisis: the post-contact Kwakiutl, the pre-contact Tenochca and National Socialist Germany.