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Individual and Society in Guiana
A Comparative Study of Amerindian Social Organisation
The Amerindian peoples of Guiana have long been recognized as forming a distinct variety of the tropical forest culture.
Peter Riviere (Author)
9780521269971, Cambridge University Press
Paperback, published 28 December 1984
136 pages
22.5 x 15.2 x 1 cm, 0.209 kg
The Amerindian peoples of Guiana, the geographical region of north-east South America, have long been recognized as forming a distinct variety of the tropical forest culture. In this book, Peter Rivière employs a comparative perspective to reveal that Guianan societies, generally characterized as socially fluid and amorphous, are in fact much more highly structured than they first appear, and he identifies certain common patterns of social organization that result from sets of individual choices and relationships. By contrasting the characteristics of Guianan society with those from elsewhere in Lowland South America, he constructs a spectrum of complexity of Amerindian social structure, and argues that the Guianan variant represents the logically simplest form of organization in the area.
1. Peoples and approaches
2. The settlement pattern: size, duration, and distribution
3. Village composition
4. The categories of social classification
5. Aspects of social relationships
6. Autonomy and dependency
7. The individual in society
8. Guiana society and the wider context
Subject Areas: Social & cultural anthropology, ethnography [JHMC]
