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Description
Updated with a new Preface, this seminal work challenges the routine ways in which anthropologists have thought about the complexity and quantity of their materials. Marilyn Strathern focuses on a problem normally regarded as commonplace; that of scale and proportion. She combines a wide-ranging interest in current theoretical issues with close attention to the cultural details of social life, attempting to establish proportionality between them. Strathern gives equal weight to two areas of contemporary debate: The difficulties inherent in anthropologically representing complex societies, and the future of cross-cultural comparison in a field where 'too much' seems known. The ethnographic focus of this book emphasizes the context through which Melanesianists have managed the complexity of their own accounts, while at the same time unfolding a commentary on perception and the mixing of indigenous forms. Revealing unexpected replications in modes of thought and in the presentation of ambiguous images, Strathern has fashioned a unique contribution to the anthropological corpus. This book was originally published under the sponsorship of the Association for Social Anthropology in Oceania.
Table of Contents
Chapter 2 Ethnography as Evocation
Chapter 3 Complex society; incomplete knowledge
Chapter 4 Feminist critique
Chapter 5 Intrusions and comparisons
Part 6 Partial Connections
Chapter 7 Full of trees, full of flutes
Chapter 8 Center and periphery
Chapter 9 Historical critique
Chapter 10 Prosthetic extensions
Product details
Published | 22 Mar 2005 |
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Format | Ebook (PDF) |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 188 |
ISBN | 9798765188002 |
Imprint | AltaMira Press |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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Strathern's central insight is that much unexplored ground lies between difference and identity, between the many and the one: that is to say, that there are alternatives to the apparently insoluble dichotomies of society and the individual, holism and atomism, comparison and ethnography. This book is provocative and pathbreaking, both as a search for an escape from these antinomies, and as a critique of the intellectual practices which give rise to them.
Simon Harrison, University of Ulster at Coleraine, Man
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On its initial publication in 1991, Partial Connections provided a bracing, subtle, and brilliantly wrought complex of forays into questions at the center of anthropology, among them history, comparison, representation, and the productively partial character of our shared enterprise. On rereading more than ten years later, it speaks with even greater clarity and insight to anthropological practice. Fresh, brilliant, and deeply rewarding, this is a contemporary classic.
Donald Brenneis, University of California, Santa Cruz
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Strathern's Partial Connections, perhaps her most theoretically exhilarating and accessible work to date, offers a potent antidote to any disenchanting effects of the comparative project in anthropology...More than a spectacular collection of provocative throught bites, Partial Connections has far-reaching implications for the way we think about the future of anthropology, and about problems of authoring and athorizing criteria for comparison...This is essential reading for serious students of cultural criticism and, quite simply, a brilliant piece of anthropological discourse
Debbora Battaglia, Mount Holyoke College, American Anthropologist