
1968
First Published
3.85
Average Rating
438
Number of Pages
This influential work is the most important and widely cited book ever published in ecological anthropology. It is a classic case study of human ecology in a tribal society, the role of culture (especially ritual) in local and regional resource management, negative feedback, and the application of systems theory to an anthropological population. It is considered a major work of theory, yet it is also empirically grounded in Rappaport's meticulous collection of quantitative and qualitative data on such "material" matters as diet and energy expenditure, as well as such mental-cognitive-ideational domains as myth and folk taxonomies. Rappaport's tour de force is a recognized classic because it contributes in so many ways to anthropological theory, ethnographic methodology, ecological anthropology, and the anthropology of religion. This enlarged edition offers a carefully reasoned, empirically focused reassessment of Rappaport's original study in the context of ongoing theoretical and methodological problems. Titles of related interest also available from Waveland Hogbin, The Island of Menstruating Religion in Wogeo, New Guinea (ISBN 9780881338843); Netting, Cultural Ecology, Second Edition (ISBN 9780881332049); Sillitoe-Sillitoe, Grass-Clearing A Factional Ethnography of Life in the New Guinea Highlands (ISBN 9781577666011); and Townsend, Environmental From Pigs to Policies, Second Edition (ISBN 9781577665816).
Avg Rating
3.85
Number of Ratings
79
5 STARS
33%
4 STARS
33%
3 STARS
24%
2 STARS
6%
1 STARS
4%
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Author

Roy A. Rappaport
Author · 3 books
Roy A. Rappaport was an American anthropologist known for his contributions to the anthropological study of ritual and to ecological anthropology.