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From the Milk River: Spatial and Temporal Processes in Northwest Amazonia
The book is an integrated account of a Northwest Amazonian society, which elucidates the structural models that underlie and unify the domains of kinship, religion, politics, and economics.
Christine Hugh-Jones (Author)
9780521358897, Cambridge University Press
Paperback, published 31 March 1988
328 pages
22.8 x 15.2 x 1.8 cm, 0.408 kg
Since its first publication in 1979, this book, together with its companion volume, The Palm and the Pleiades by Stephen Hugh-Jones, has become established as 'the most competent and sophisticated ethnography to date of any South American tropical forest people' (The Times Higher Education Supplement). Both are now available for the first time in paperback. The book is an integrated account of a Northwest Amazonian society, which elucidates the structural models that underlie and unify the domains of kinship, religion, politics and economics. These dynamic models are built from a rich corpus of ethnographic data drawn from extensive field research, and are developed in such a way that, as far as possible, they reproduce an Indian theory of society. Besides enhancing anthropological understanding of a fascinating culture area, the book's highly original approach makes it an important contribution to the general theory of social and cultural structures.
List of figures, tables and maps
List of myths
Preface
Acknowledgements
Orthography
1. Introduction
2. Social structure
3. The set of specialist roles
4. Kinship and marriage
5. The life-cycle
6. Production and consumption
7. Concepts of space-time
8. Conclusion
Appendices
Works cited
Index.
Subject Areas: Social & cultural anthropology, ethnography [JHMC]
