Routledge Revivals: The Ethnography of Malinowski (1979)

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ceremonial exchange
Coconut Palms
Coral Gardens
Cross-cousin Marriage
Devious
economic anthropology
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Europe
fieldwork methodology
Follow
Garden Magician
Garden Work
Gardening Team
Islam
kinship systems
Kinsmen
Kula Articles
Kula Community
Kula Expedition
Kula Ring
Lukuba Clan
Maternal Kinsmen
medieval
Melanesian societies
Middle East
North Africa
Opening Gift
Overseas Expeditions
Paramount Chief
participant observation in Papua New Guinea
philosophy
politics
Port Moresby
Salt Water
Sea Water
social anthropology
Solicitary Gift
theology
Vice Versa
Woodlark Island
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138063976
  • Weight: 670g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 02 Jun 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Bronislaw Malinowski is one of the founding fathers of modern social anthropology and the innovator of the technique of prolonged and intensive fieldwork. His writings about the Trobriand Islands of Papua were in their time the most formative influence on the work of British social anthropologists and are of perennial interest and importance. They produced a revolution in the aims and field techniques of social anthropologists, and the method he created is that now normally used by anthropologists in the field.

Malinowski’s field material remains compulsory reading for students. First published in 1979, this book draws from the major monographs of Malinowski to compile a selection of his writings on the Trobriand Islanders. In presenting a concise Trobriand ethnography in one volume, the author gives balanced coverage of economic life, kinship, marriage and land tenure, and to the system of ceremonial exchange known as the Kula. He also provides, in an introductory essay, a critical assessment of Malinowski the ethnographer, and gives a brief account of the Trobriands in a modern perspective.