Switch to: Citations

Add references

You must login to add references.
  1. Gods, Ghosts and Men in Melanesia.Edwin A. Cook, P. Lawrence & M. J. Meggitt - 1970 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 90 (2):364.
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  • From Mandeville to Marx. The Genesis and Triumph of Economic Ideology.Louis Dumont - 1977 - Studies in Soviet Thought 20 (2):217-217.
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   28 citations  
  • Artifacts of history: events and the interpretation of images.Marilyn Strathern - 1990 - In Jukka Siikala (ed.), Culture and history in the pacific. pp. 25-44.
    Amongst other things, this paper argues that a kind of anthropology, referred to by Strathern as modernist anthropology, has no reason to refer to artifacts except as illustrations. They are merely useful examples to illustrate information the anthropologist has provided about a given social/cultural context, e.g. to illustrate a worldview.
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   5 citations  
  • The Savage Mind.Alasdair MacIntyre & Claude Levi-Strauss - 1967 - Philosophical Quarterly 17 (69):372.
    "Every word, like a sacred object, has its place. No _précis_ is possible. This extraordinary book must be read."—Edmund Carpenter, _New York Times Book Review _ "No outline is possible; I can only say that reading this book is a most exciting intellectual exercise in which dialectic, wit, and imagination combine to stimulate and provoke at every page."—Edmund Leach, _Man _ "Lévi-Strauss's books are tough: very scholarly, very dense, very rapid in argument. But once you have mastered him, human history (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   306 citations  
  • Binary license.Marilyn Strathern - 2011 - Common Knowledge 17 (1):87-103.
    This article exploits the “binary license” offered by the title of the symposium in which it appears (“Comparative Relativism”) as a kind of promise of connection. The author suggests, however tentatively, that in the challenge of heterogeneity, fractality, perspective/-alism, and multiplicities lies the power of the forking pathway: the moment a relation is created through divergence. If we are invited—in the same breath—to consider forms of comparison and forms of relativism (dropping difference and similarity), we are also offered two paths, (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   9 citations