Demands of the Day asks about the logical standards and forms that
should guide ethical and experimental anthropology in the twenty-first
century. Anthropologists Paul Rabinow and Anthony Stavrianakis do so by
taking up Max Weber's notion of the "demands of the day." Just as the
demand of the day for anthropology decades ago consisted of thinking
about fieldwork, today, they argue, the demand is to examine what
happens after, how the experiences of fieldwork are gathered, curated,
narrated, and ultimately made available for an anthropological practice
that moves beyond mere ethnographic description. Rabinow and
Stavrianakis draw on experiences from an innovative set of
anthropological experiments that investigated how and whether the human
and biological sciences could be brought into a mutually enriching
relationship. Conceptualizing the anthropological and philosophic
ramifications of these inquiries, they offer a bold challenge to
contemporary anthropology to undertake a more rigorous examination of
its own practices, blind spots, and capacities, in order to meet the
demands of our day.