Edited by Giovanni da Col (Cambridge) and Stéphane Gros (CNRS)
The phoneme that separates the English words "kinship" and "kingship" deserves to be known as the "g" factor in history.
– Luc de Heusch
Table of Contents
Front & Back Matter
Front & Back Matter
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i–v
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Editorial
Foreword: The return of ethnographic theory
Giovanni da Col, David Graeber
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vi–xxxv
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Themed Articles
David Graeber
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1–62
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Marshall Sahlins
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63–101
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Gregory Schrempp
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103–139
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Alberto Corsín Jiménez
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141–157
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Roy Wagner
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159–177
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Chris Gregory
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179–209
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Varia
Laura Nader
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211–219
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Anna M. Mann, Annemarie M. Mol, Priya Satalkar, Amalinda Savirani, Nasima Selim, Malini Sur, Emily Yates-Doerr
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221–243
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Unedited
Marilyn Strathern
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245–278
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Kingship and divinity: The unpublished Frazer Lecture, Oxford, 28 October 1982
Edmund R. Leach
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279–298
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Forum
Von Hügel’s curiosity: Encounter and experiment in the new museum
Nicholas Thomas
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299–314
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Translations
Bodies, kinship and power(s) in the Baruya culture
Maurice Godelier
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315–344
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Begetting ordinary humans
Maurice Godelier
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345–389
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Begetting extraordinary humans
Maurice Godelier
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391–406
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Reprints
The divine kingship of the Shilluk of the Nilotic Sudan: The Frazer Lecture, 1948
E .E. Evans-Pritchard
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407–422
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The place of grace in anthropology
Julian Pitt-Rivers
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423–450
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Some muddles in the models: or, how the system really works
David M. Schneider
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451–492
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