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of the Histories of Anthropology

American anthropologist Edward Sapir (1884-1939), one of Franz Boas’ most prominent disciples, devoted himself particularly to linguistics (his original training). He worked in several North American Indian contexts, both in the United States and Canada, within a salvage ethnography framework, while proposing a classification of the continent’s linguistic families that became a reference. Combining language, culture and psychology, he also explored historical and theoretical questions about scriptless languages.

Keywords: Linguistics | Culturalism | 20th century | United States of America | Canada | Amerindian studies

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