A Polymath Anthropologist: Essays in Honour of Ann ChowningThis volume honours Ann Chownings contributions to anthropology as a whole and to the anthropology of Melanesia in particular. It reflects the scope of her interests by bringing together a wide range of scholars and topics. A biographical narrative (by Judith Huntsman) of her life to date traces her career and there is a comprehensive bibliography of her works (Kathryn Creely). The essays deal primarily with issues in Oceania, except for two addressing one of her favourite pasttimes detective fiction, as a source of innovative word formation (Laurie Bauer) and its parallels to ethnography (Claudia Gross). Three archaeology essays discuss stone artefacts in Papua New Guinea (Pamela Swadling, Jim Specht, Susan Buhner), and one essay surveys dental morphology in Oceania (Daris R. Swindler). Essays in linguistics range from surveys of Oceanic plant names (Malcolm Ross), Proto Micronesian (Ward II. Goodcnough) and Proto Oceanic (Andrew Pawley) to detailed analyses of the languages of Tokelau (Robin Hooper) and Aneityum (John Lynch). The largest section consists of essays in socio-cultural anthropology, combining themes that have been the focus of Ann Chowning's work: marriage and social organisation, gender and sexuality, social and economic change, leadership, religion, myth and human-animal relations. These essays include a survey of anthropology in Oceania (Harriet D. and Andrew P. Lyons) and cover Polynesia (Phyllis Herda, Judith Huntsman, Penelope Schoeffel), New Zealand (Joan Metge, Julie Park), the Solomon Islands (Christine Dureau) and Papua New Guinea (John Barker, Mark Busse, Michael Monsell-Davis, Mark Mosko, Maev O'Collins, Marilyn Strathern). There are also essays recollecting Ann Chowning as a teacher, colleague and friend (Jane C. Goodale, Virginia Greene, Harriet D. Lyons, Luisa Margolies, James Urry, Michael W. Young). |
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第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 44 筆
第 79 頁
MARK BUSSE University of Auckland In their 1981 essay on “ Politics and
Gender in Simple Societies " Jane Collier and Michelle Rosaldo argued that
there are important differences between brideservice societies and bridewealth
societies ...
MARK BUSSE University of Auckland In their 1981 essay on “ Politics and
Gender in Simple Societies " Jane Collier and Michelle Rosaldo argued that
there are important differences between brideservice societies and bridewealth
societies ...
第 80 頁
The logical implication of this is that societies in which young men earn money
which they then use to make marriage exchanges would be classified as
brideservice , rather than bridewealth , societies . Collier and Rosaldo argued
that ...
The logical implication of this is that societies in which young men earn money
which they then use to make marriage exchanges would be classified as
brideservice , rather than bridewealth , societies . Collier and Rosaldo argued
that ...
第 81 頁
As a result , the most visible inequality in otherwise egalitarian brideservice
societies is the inequality between married and unmarried men . Collier ( 1988 :
22 ) stated that unmarried men tend to eat irregularly and sleep uncomfortably ...
As a result , the most visible inequality in otherwise egalitarian brideservice
societies is the inequality between married and unmarried men . Collier ( 1988 :
22 ) stated that unmarried men tend to eat irregularly and sleep uncomfortably ...
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內容
A LongTerm View of CoastalHighlands Interactions | 1 |
Stone Axe Blades and Valuables in New Britain Papua New Guinea | 15 |
The Stones of Pasismanua Revisited | 23 |
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