Edward Sapir(1884-1939) was one of the foremost linguists and anthropologists of his time. He is most widely known for his contributions to the study of North American Indian languages.
Volume I
Part I: Obituaries
Part II: Intellectual influences and exchanges
Part III: Later assessments of Sapir’s biography and career
Part IV: Reviews of Sapir’s Time Perspective (1916) and language (1921)
Part V: Reviews of and review articles on Selected Writings (1949)
Volume II
Part VI: Evaluations of particular aspects of Sapir’s work and legacy
Part VII: Comments on and evaluations of Sapir’s work on Amerindian languages
Part VIII: Sapir and his work at the National Museum of Man, 1910-1925
Volume III
Part IX: Sapir and his ideas of culture and psychology
Part X: Sapir as an ethnologist
Part XI: Sapir as a student of literature
Part XII: Sapir and the ‘Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis’
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