From intimate workshops and modest gatherings to meetings in exotic
places, conferences are a mainstay of academic life. The conferences
that are the subject of this book are the week-long international
symposia sponsored by the Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological
Research, over 150 of which were held between 1952 and 2000. In their
totality, they closely parallel the development of anthropology during
this period, and indeed played a large part in shaping that development.
In revisiting her experiences with the Wenner-Gren symposia over a
thirteen-year period, Sydel Silverman examines the conference process as
it relates to the production of knowledge and new directions in
anthropology.