The Politics of Egalitarianism: Theory and Practice

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Jacqueline Solway
Berghahn Books, Mar 1, 2006 - Social Science - 272 pages

The essays assembled in this book exemplify the way political anthropologists address a range of problems that deeply affect people throughout the world. The authors draw their inspiration from the work of Canadian anthropologist Richard B. Lee, and, like him, they are concerned with understanding and acting upon issues of “indigenous rights”; the impact of colonialism, postcolonial state formation, and neoliberalism on local communities and cultures; the process of culture change; what the history and politics of egalitarian societies reveal about issues of “human nature” or “social evolution”; and how peoples in southern Africa are affected by and responding to the most recent crisis in their midst, the spread of AIDS. The authors in this volume discuss the state of a range of contemporary debates in the field that in various ways extend the political, theoretical, and empirical issues that have animated Lee's work. In addition, the book provides readers with important contemporary Kalahari studies, as well as “classic” works on foraging societies.

 

Contents

INTRODUCTION
1
PART I The Politics and Practices of Egalitarianism
19
Chapter 1 ALL PEOPLE ARE NOT GOOD
21
Chapter 2 COMMUNITY STATE AND QUESTIONS OF SOCIAL EVOLUTION IN KARL MARXS ETHNOLOGICAL NOTEBOOKS
31
Chapter 3 SUBTLE MATTERS OF THEORY AND EMPHASIS
53
FOUR DECADES ON
65
Chapter 5 THE ORIGINAL AFFLUENT SOCIETY
79
Chapter 6 ON THE POLITICS OF BEING JEWISH IN A MULTIRACIAL STATE
99
Chapter 9 LAND LIVESTOCK AND LEADERSHIP AMONG THE JUHOANSI SAN OF NORTHWESTERN BOTSWANA
149
Chapter 10 CONTEMPORARY BUSHMAN ART IDENTITY POLITICS AND THE PRIMITIVISM DISCOURSE
159
Chapter 11 CLASS CULTURE AND RECOGNITION
189
Chapter 12 THE OTHER SIDE OF DEVELOPMENT
205
An Appreciation
221
Chapter 13 RICHARD B LEE AND COMPANY
223
THE POLITICS ART AND SCIENCE OF ANTHROPOLOGY
229
SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY
243

PART II The Kalahari Then and Now
117
Chapter 7 THE LIONBUSHMAN RELATIONSHIP IN NYAE NYAE IN THE 1950S
119
Chapter 8 THE KALAHARI PEOPLES FUND
131
NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS
249
INDEX
253
Copyright

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About the author (2006)

Jacqueline Solway is associate professor of International Development Studies and Anthropology at Trent University.

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