1st Edition

Social Organization and Peasant Societies Festschrift in Honor of Raymond Firth

By Maurice Freedman Copyright 1967
    312 Pages
    by Routledge

    312 Pages
    by Routledge

    The essays included in Social Organization and Peasant Societies were written in honor of the man who taught their authors. Each entry is about different problems within the general field of "social organization."They were composed in many styles; and deal ethnographically with a heterogeneous collection of peoples and countries. Together they illustrate an important aspect of Firth's influence as a teacher: the range of his interests and his success in promoting social anthropological research on the broadest front.

    The breadth and the variety in the work of his students reflect Firth's own catholicity. From economics he reached into every corner of the field covered by social anthropology, and many of his interests can be traced in these essays on themes in kinship and marriage (by Baric, Benedict, Kaberry, and Leach) and on religious subjects (by Freedman, Morris, and Stanner). Still more detail the study of modern social change (by Little and Mayer). There is even one is on art (by Forge). Three are devoted to subjects in economic anthropology (by Belshaw, Swift, and Ward). On all of these varied and complex topics Raymond Firth has written extensively and taught untiringly. Many of the contributors to his festschrift are themselves leading anthropologists.

    Raymond Firth's importance in the history of social anthropology is undisputed. He came into the profession when it was small and unformed, when it existed only in the tiny groups of people around Malinowski and Radcliffe-Brown. He urged it on, by intellectual leadership, by careful organization, and by devoted service. He was one of a small band of scholars; he created a large school. He inherited an esoteric seminar from Malinowski; he turned it into a great class where, over the years, hundreds of students marveled at his skill and learned their craft as analysts and field workers. His protege listened to his formulation of problems, his critique of methods, and his courteous but unrelenting dissection of arguments. In this book, their research is assembled as a tribute to the life and memory of Raymond Firth.

    Levels of Change in Yugoslav Kinship; Theoretical Problems in Economic Anthropology; The Equality of the Sexes in the Seychelles; The Abelam Artist; Ancestor Worship: Two Facets of the Chinese Case; The Plasticity of New Guinea Kinship; The Language of Kachin Kinship: Reflections on a Tikopia Model; Voluntary Associations in Urban Life: A Case Study of Differential Adaptation; Patrons and Brokers: Rural Leadership in Four Overseas Indian Communities; Shamanism among the Oya Melanau; Reflections on Durkheim and Aboriginal Religion; Economic Concentration and Malay Peasant Society; Chinese Fishermen in Hong Kong: Their Post-Peasant Economy

    Biography

    Maurice Freedman