Sir James George Frazer
b. Jan. 1, 1854, Glasgow, Scot.
d. May 7, 1941, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, Eng.
British anthropologist, folklorist, and classical scholar,
best
remembered as the author of The Golden Bough [Il ramo d'oro].
From an academy in Helensburgh, Dumbarton, Frazer went to
Glasgow University (1869), entered Trinity College, Cambridge
(1874), and became a fellow (1879).
In 1907 he was appointed
professor of social anthropology at Liverpool, but he returned to
Cambridge after one session, remaining there for the rest of his life.
His outstanding position among anthropologists was established by the
publication in 1890 of The Golden Bough: A Study in Comparative
Religion (enlarged to 12 vol., 1911-15; abridged edition in 1 vol.,
1922; supplementary vol. Aftermath, 1936).
The underlying theme of
the work is Frazer's theory of a general development of modes of
thought from the magical to the religious and, finally, to the scientific.
His distinction between magic and religion (magic as an attempt to
control events by technical acts based upon faulty reasoning, religion
as an appeal for help to spiritual beings) has been basically assumed
in much anthropological writing since his time.
Although the
evolutionary sequence of magical, religious, and scientific thought is
no longer accepted and Frazer's broad general psychological theory
has proved unsatisfactory, his work enabled him to synthesize and
compare a wider range of information about religious and magical
practices than has been achieved subsequently by any other single
anthropologist.
The Golden Bough directed attention to the combination of priestly
with kingly office in the "divine kingships" widely reported from
Africa and elsewhere.
According to Frazer, the institution of divine
kingship derived from the belief that the well-being of the social and
natural orders depended upon the vitality of the king, who must
therefore be slain when his powers begin to fail him and be replaced
by a vigorous successor.
In making a vast range of primitive custom appear intelligible to
European thinkers of his time, Frazer had a wide influence among
men of letters; and, though he traveled little himself, he was in close
contact with missionaries and administrators who provided
information for him and valued his interpretation of it.
His other works
include Totemism and Exogamy (1910) and Folk-Lore in the Old
Testament (1918).
He was knighted in 1914.
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