This book argues that the breaking and re-making of frames of analysis
underlie the history of theorizing in anthropology. Pamela J. Stewart
and Andrew J. Strathern note that this mode of analysis risks
fabricating over-essentialized dichotomies between viewpoints. The
authors advocate a mindful, nuanced, people-centered approach to all
theorizing-one that avoids total system approaches (-isms) and suggest
that theory should relate cogently to ethnography. Mindful anthropology,
as this book envisages it, is not a specific theory but a philosophical
aspiration for the discipline as a whole.