“Stephen Murray emerges from these pages as a committed scholar, brilliant, incisive, tenacious, courageous, and-occasionally-grumpy and contentious. <i>Invisible Contrarian</i> demonstrates that signal contributions to the discipline can be made amid other work as more and more anthropologists are developing careers outside the academy.”-Andrea Laforet, coeditor of <i>The Franz Boas Papers, Volume 2</i> “No other book assembles both papers by Stephen Murray and comments on his work. This is a treasure trove for any scholar working on Murray or wanting to know more about his work in either anthropology or queer studies. Invisible Contrarian will be the definitive Murray reference.”-Yves Winkin, Distinguished Professor Emeritus of anthropology and communication studies at the University of LiÈge
Murray’s wide-ranging work included linguistics, regional ethnography in Latin America and Asia, activism, history of anthropology in relation to social sciences, and migration studies.
Along with a complete list of his publications, Invisible Contrarian highlights Murray’s methodological innovations and includes key writings that remain little known, since he never pursued a tenured research position. Murray’s significant, prolific contributions deserve not only to be reexamined but to be shared with contemporary and future audiences. Ideal both as a primer for those who have not yet read Murray’s work and as an in-depth resource for those already familiar with him, this volume demonstrates the wide-ranging accomplishments of a man who modeled how to be an independent scholar outside an academic position.
Preface by Peter M. Nardi
Part 1. Introduction
Introducing Stephen O. Murray as Invisible Contrarian
Wendy Leeds-Hurwitz and Regna Darnell
1. Stephen O. Murray in His Own Words: Extracts from His Journal
Prepared by Wendy Leeds-Hurwitz and Regna Darnell
Part 2. Disciplinary History
2. The Breadth and Depth of Creativity in Stephen O. Murray’s Research and Publications
Wendy Leeds-Hurwitz
3. Stephen O. Murray as Collaborator
Regna Darnell
4. Thinking through Area in the History of Anthropology
Robert Oppenheim
5. “aids and the Social Imaginary” Thirty Years Later: A Controversial Early Skirmish in the Decolonizing of Anthropology
Ralph Bolton
Part 3. Homosexualities
6. Stephen O. Murray’s Legacy in the Comparative Study of Homosexualities
Barry D Adam
7. Stephen O. Murray’s Contributions to Homosexuality Studies in Latin America
Milton Machuca-GÁlvez
8. Stephen O. Murray and the Development of Queer African Studies
Marc Epprecht
Part 4. Stephen O. Murray Gets the Last Word
9. John Gumperz in Context: 1977 and 1992 Interviews
Stephen O. Murray
10. Doing History of Anthropology
Stephen O. Murray
11. What Is a Conversation (in Anglo America)?
Stephen O. Murray
12. Introduction to Male Sexual Subjectivities
Stephen O. Murray
13. What Had Been
Stephen O. Murray
Appendix
Contributors
Index