Robert Ranulph Marett
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R. R. Marett (Robert Ranulph Marett) 1866-1943 was a British ethnologist (Jersey 1866-1943). Exponent of the British evolutionary school, he dealt with religious ethnology. In this field he modified the evolutionary scale of religion fixed by Tylor, which placed animism in the first place. Marett articulated the conception of (magical pre-animism) an impersonal force, identified with the Melanesian term of mana. The idea of the mana, mostly psychical than cultural product, was presented mainly in his work The Threshold of Religion (1909) with which he tried to establish the context of presupposed ideas of the religion, to Anthropology (1912) and Psychology and Folklore (1920). R. R. Marett suceeded Tylor as Reader in Anthropology in 1910 Oxford and in 1914 established a Department of Social Anthropology.
Convinced that primitive man had not developed the intellectual to form even such simplistic explanations as Tylor proposed, Marett also criticized E. B. Tylor’s theories of animism, suggesting that early religion was more emotional and intuitional in origin. He believed that early man recognized some inanimate objects because of their specific characteristics; treated all animate objects as having a life, but never distinguished soul as separate from the body. Considering that early man's universal belief in mana is so self-evident, Marett found insignificant the question of how men and women developed the belief that a spirit or soul resides in all objects.
He worked on the palaeolithic site of La Cotte de St Brelade from 1910 - 1914, recovering some hominid teeth and other remains of habitation by Neanderthal man. He published "The Site, Fauna, and Industry of La Cotte de St. Brelade, Jersey" (Archaeologia LXVII, 1916).
He became Rector of Exeter College, Oxford.
His students included Marius Barbeau.
He was the only son of Sir Robert Pipon Marett, poet and Bailiff of Jersey, and Julia Anne Marett.
[edit] Works and Lectures
- The Threshold of Religion, (1909)
- Anthropology, (1912)
- Psychology and Folklore, (1920)
- Faith, Hope and Charity in Primitive Religion, (1930–1932)
- Sacraments of Simple Folk, (1930–1932)
- A Jerseyman at Oxford, (1941) autobiography