Michael Taussig

Michael Taussig’s Followers (117)

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Michael Taussig


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Michael Taussig (born 1940) earned a medical degree from the University of Sydney, received his PhD. in anthropology from the London School of Economics and is a professor at Columbia University and European Graduate School. Although he has published on medical anthropology, he is best known for his engagement with Marx's idea of commodity fetishism, especially in terms of the work of Walter Benjamin. ...more

Average rating: 4.02 · 2,173 ratings · 161 reviews · 53 distinct worksSimilar authors
The Devil and Commodity Fet...

3.96 avg rating — 484 ratings — published 1980 — 12 editions
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Shamanism, Colonialism, and...

4.16 avg rating — 305 ratings — published 1987 — 8 editions
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Mimesis and Alterity: A Par...

3.91 avg rating — 225 ratings — published 1992 — 15 editions
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My Cocaine Museum

4.09 avg rating — 163 ratings — published 2004 — 8 editions
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I Swear I Saw This: Drawing...

4.12 avg rating — 141 ratings — published 2011 — 7 editions
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Law in a Lawless Land: Diar...

3.95 avg rating — 134 ratings — published 2003 — 6 editions
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What Color Is the Sacred?

4.04 avg rating — 114 ratings — published 2009 — 14 editions
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The Magic of the State

4.09 avg rating — 96 ratings — published 1996 — 12 editions
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Walter Benjamin's Grave

4.12 avg rating — 82 ratings — published 2006 — 7 editions
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The Nervous System

4.11 avg rating — 56 ratings — published 1991 — 11 editions
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More books by Michael Taussig…
Quotes by Michael Taussig  (?)
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“Magical beliefs are revelatory and fascinating not because they are ill-conceived instruments of utility but because they are poetic echoes of the cadences that guide the innermost course of the world. Magic takes language, symbols, and intelligibility to their outermost limits, to explore life and thereby to change its destination.”
Michael Taussig, The Devil and Commodity Fetishism in South America

“The cure is to become a curer. In being healed he is also becoming a healer. In becoming one the option is whether he will succumb to the encroachment of death subsequent to soul loss, or whether he will allow the sickness-causing trauma and the healer's ministrations to reweave the creative forces in his personality and life experience into a force that bestows life upon himself and upon others through that bestowal. In the journey undertaken by the healer and the sick man into an underworld and up into the mountains across the sacred landscape of space and time, it is this option that is being traversed.”
Michael Taussig, Shamanism, Colonialism, and the Wild Man: A Study in Terror and Healing

“Instead of man being the aim of production, production is the aim of man and wealth the aim of production, instead of tools and the productive mechanism in general liberating man from the slavery of toil, man has become the slave of tools and the industry has become synonymous with business and people have been duped into asking, “what’s good for business?” instead of, “what is business good for?”
Michael Taussig, The Devil and Commodity Fetishism in South America

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