Australian Aboriginal History, Great Britain - General & Miscellaneous History, Public Opinion - Regional, History of Anthropology, Australian & Oceanic Studies - Australia & New Zealand - Native Peoples, Australia & Oceania - Antiquities
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Overview
The emergence of anthropology in Britain coincided with the publication of Darwin's book on the origin of species. In the context of inescapable questions about the natural history of our own species, Australian Aborigines were assigned the role of exemplars par excellence of beginnings and early human forms. In the last quarter of the nineteenth century, European scholars bent on discovering the origins of social institutions began a rush on the Australian material that lasted well into the present century. The Aborigines have consequently featured as a crucial case-study for generations of social theorists, including Tylor, Frazer, Durkheim and Freud. Arguments about Aborigines reviews a range of controversies (some still alive) that played an important role in the formative period of British social anthropology. The chapters cover family life, male/female relationships, conception beliefs, the mother-in-law taboo, various aspects of religion and ritual, political organization, and land rights: all subjects that have been matters of lively interest and long-running research. Along the way, the study traces changes in Aboriginal circumstances and practices and notes the ways in which these changes affected the scholarly debate.Book Details
Published
June 27, 1996
Publisher
Cambridge [England] ; Cambridge University Press, 1996.
Pages
225
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780521460088