The Character of Kinship
Jack Goody; Meyer FortesPublished on the occasion of the retirement of Meyer Fortes.
Strathern, A. Kinship, descent and locality: some New Guinea examples.
La Fontaine, J. Descent in New Guinea: an Africanist view.
Leach, E. Complementary filiation and bilateral kinship.
Barnes, J. A. Genetrix: genitor:: nature: culture?
Bloch, M. The long term and the short term: the economic and political significance of the morality of kinship.
Pitt-Rivers, J. The kith and the kin.
Freeman, D. Kinship, attachment behaviour and the primary bond.
Smith, R. T. The matrifocal family.
Harris, G. Furies, witches and mothers.
Abrahams, R. G. Some aspects of levirate.
Goody, J. Polygyny, economy and the role of women.
Tambiah, S. J. From varna to caste through mixed unions.
Barnes, J. A. Bibliography of the writings of Meyer Fortes (p. 231-235)
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The Theft of History
Professor Jack Goody Builds On His Own Previous Work To Extend Further His Highly Influential Critique Of What He Sees As The Pervasive Eurocentric Or Occidentalist Biases Of So Much Western Historical Writing. Goody Also Examines The Consequent 'theft' By The West Of The Achievements Of Other Cultures In The Invention Of (notably) Democracy, Capitalism, Individualism, And Love. The Theft Of History Discusses A Number Of Theorists In Detail, Including Marx, Weber And Norbert Elias, And Engages With Critical Admiration Western Historians Like Fernand Braudel, Moses Finlay And Perry Anderson. Major Questions Of Method Are Raised, And Goody Proposes A New Comparative Methodology For Cross-cultural Analysis, One That Gives A Much More Sophisticated Basis For Assessing Divergent Historical Outcomes, And Replaces Outmoded Simple Differences Between East And West. The Theft Of History Will Be Read By An Unusually Wide Audience Of Historians, Anthropologists And Social Theorists. -- Publisher Description From Http://www.cambridge.org (oct. 18, 2011). Who Stole What? : Time And Space -- The Invention Of Antiquity -- Feudalism : A Transition To Capitalism Or The Collapse Of Europe And The Domination Of Asia? -- Asiatic Despots, In Turkey And Elsewhere? -- Science And Civilization In Renaissance Europe -- The Theft Of 'civilization' : Elias And Absolutist Europe -- The Theft Of 'capitalism' : Braudel And Global Comparison -- The Theft Of Institutions, Towns, And Universities -- The...
The Power of the Written Tradition (Smithsonian Series in Ethnographic Inquiry)
In this collection of nine essays, noted anthropologist Jack Goody explores his view of writing as a transforming technology, charting the differences between cultures with writing and those without in such practices as historical record keeping, religious ceremony, and the telling of time. He describes how one version of a ritual---the Bagre of the loDagaa of northern Ghana---assumed primacy over other versions when it was written down, and he shows that as societies acquired writing, verbatim memorization rather than face-to-face interaction became a mainstay of education.
A Critique of the Study of Kinship
Schneider views kinship study as a product of Western bias and challenges its use as the universal measure of the study of social structure.
The Oriental, the Ancient and the Primitive: Systems of Marriage and the Family in the Pre-Industrial Societies of Eurasia (Studies in Literacy, the Family, Culture and the State)
Continuing the comparative survey of pre-industrial family formation undertaken in The Development of Family and Marriage in Europe (1983), Professor Goody looks in depth at kinship practice in Asia. His findings cause him to question many traditional assumptions about the "primitive" East, and he suggests that, in contrast to pre-colonial Africa, kinship practice in Asia has much in common with that prevailing in parts of pre-industrial Europe. Goody examines the transmission of productive and other property in relation both to the prevailing political economy and to family and ideological structures, and explores the distribution of mechanisms and strategies of management across cultures. The book concludes that notions of western "uniqueness" are often misplaced, and that much previous work on Asian kinship has been unwittingly distorted by the application of concepts and approaches derived from other, inappropriate, social formations.
The expansive moment : the rise of social anthropology in Britain and Africa, 1918-1970
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Innovation, policy, and law : Australia and the international high technology economy
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The Little Book of Essential Foreign Insults
Have you ever struggled to find the French for "so you want to fight, big nose?" Ever had the urge to tell a German to hide their face before you vomit? Or inform an Italian that their beer tastes of piss? You'll never be lost for words again with this book, which will ensure that you always have the Arabic for "kiss my arse" and the Swedish for "nob cheese" at your fingertips.
The American Dream and the Public Schools
Jennifer L. Hochschild, Nathan Scovronick, Jennifer L. Hochschild
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Killer Web Content : Make the Sale, Deliver the Service, Build the Brand
Written by a corporate specialist in web development who has advised Microsoft and HP, Killer Web Content provides the strategies and practical techniques to make sure your web content matches your customers' needs. Accessible, concise and practical, this guide distills the information and insight major companies pay hundreds of thousands of dollars for and shows any website owner how to present your material in a compelling way which follows the accepted rules of layout and navigation that will keep site visitors on your site longer. The book also covers the complicated world of optimizing search results and explains how to integrate blogs, RSS feeds and email newsletters into your total web presence.
Marketing in a Nutshell : Key Concepts for Non-specialists
Mike Meldrum And Malcolm Mcdonald
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Sons of the city : a novel
The streets of Philadelphia are meaner than most ... A city on the edge is about to explode. The killing of a cop in a rundown Philly crack house has stoked racial tensions to the boiling point -- as angry police strike out in force, rounding up every young black man in sight. Sergeant Eddie North suspects that the Mob was behind the slaying, though it may already be too late to douse the inevitable fire. A man obsessed with justice -- and vengeance -- North is ready to launch his own private war on Organized Crime, with unexpected help from Michelle Ryder, the policewoman sister of the slain officer, who's willing to risk her own life and career undercover. But the poison polluting the City of Brotherly Love is more toxic than either of them suspects. The Mafia life is dragging Michelle in deeper than she can handle. And Eddie North is about to discover the devastating consequences awaiting those who press the limits of the law.
Staphylococcus Aureus Infections (Deadly Diseases and Epidemics)
Lisa Freeman-Cook, Kevin D. Freeman-Cook
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Myth, Ritual and the Oral
In Myth, Ritual and the Oral Jack Goody, one of the world's most distinguished anthropologists, returns to the related themes of myth, orality and literacy, subjects that have long been a touchstone in anthropological thinking. Combining classic papers with recent unpublished work, this volume brings together some of the most important essays written on these themes in the past half century, representative of a lifetime of critical engagement and research. In characteristically clear and accessible style, Jack Goody addresses fundamental conceptual schemes underpinning modern anthropology, providing potent critiques of current theoretical trends. Drawing upon his highly influential work on the LoDagaa myth of the Bagre, Goody challenges structuralist and functionalist interpretations of oral 'literature', stressing the issues of variation, imagination and creativity, and the problems of methodology and analysis. These insightful, and at times provocative, essays will stimulate fresh debate and prove invaluable to students and teachers of social anthropology. -- Back cover
The Power of the Written Tradition (Smithsonian Series in Ethnographic Inquiry)
In this collection of nine essays, noted anthropologist Jack Goody explores his view of writing as a transforming technology, charting the differences between cultures with writing and those without in such practices as historical record keeping, religious ceremony, and the telling of time. He describes how one version of a ritual---the Bagre of the loDagaa of northern Ghana---assumed primacy over other versions when it was written down, and he shows that as societies acquired writing, verbatim memorization rather than face-to-face interaction became a mainstay of education.