Social anthropology, defined operationally in terms of what social anthropologists have done in the last fifty years, is the study and comparison of tribal societies and of small fields of social life with emphasis on the role of custom. When a social anthropologist's research leads him into any field, which belongs to other disciplines, what line should he adopt? What use may he make of the results that other scholars have already achieved? Must he knowingly make naive assumptions concerning events, which they have regarded as complex?
In each of the fascinating essays which in turn form the core of this book-V. W. Turner's on symbols in Ndembu ritual; F. G. Bailey's on disputes which occurred in two Orissa villages; A. L. Epstein's on urban communities in Africa; T. Lupton's and S. Cunnison's on the relationship between behaviour in three Manchester workshops and certain events which happened outside; and W. Watson's on social mobility and social class in a coalmining Scottish burgh-several social anthropologists attempt to answer these questions by discussing the problems of method that they have encountered in their own recent research; and in the searching discussion which follows Ely Devons and Max Gluckman sum up the results.
To analyze one first has to circumscribe one's field, and then simplify within the area of circumscription. Both circumscription and simplification may involve procedures of absorbing, abridging, and making na?ve assumptions. The contributors draw attention to the attempt to distinguish between psychical facts (emotions, thoughts, etc.) and psychological, which we believe should apply only to statements within the science of psychology, and not to be used by the former. They similarly distinguish between social facts and sociological or social-anthropological statements. "Psychological" and "sociological" are so well established in common parlance as adjectives to categorize facts that attempts to specialize them as hopeless. (Verlagstext)
/ AUS DEM INHALT: / / /
Preface | III
1Introduction / Ely Devons and Max Gluckman | 13
2Symbols in Ndembu ritual / VWTurner | 20
3Two villages in Orissa (India) / FGBailey | 52
4Urban communities in Africa / ALEpstein | 83
5Workshop behaviour / Tom Lupton and Sheila Cunnison | 103
6Social mobility and social class in industrial communities / William Watson | 129
7Conclusion: Modes and consequences of limiting a field of study / Ely Devons and Max Gluckman | 158
Bibliography |263
Index | 269
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edited by Max Gluckman
Jahr:
2009
Verlag:
New Brunswick [u.a.], Aldine Transaction
Aufsätze:
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Systematik:
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GS.ET, FS.E
ISBN:
978-0-202-30859-3
2. ISBN:
0-202-30859-6
Beschreibung:
2. Aufl., VI, 274 S.
Schlagwörter:
Homogenes System, Kulturanalyse, Sozialanthropologie, Aufsatzsammlung, Soziales System, Sozialpsychologie, Soziale Anthropologie, Sozio-kulturelle Anthropologie, System, Beiträge, Gesellschaftspsychologie, Gesellschaftssystem <Soziales System>, Sammelwerk, Soziale Systeme, Sozialsystem, Sozialsysteme, Soziokulturelles System
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Beteiligte Personen:
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Gluckman, Max
Sprache:
Englisch
Fußnote:
Bibliography: p. [263]-268.
Mediengruppe:
Buch