05561oam 2200709I 450 991079066550332120230617012659.01-136-54004-00-415-86656-11-315-01763-61-136-53997-210.4324/9781315017631(CKB)2550000001128437(EBL)1460927(OCoLC)862048815(SSID)ssj0001168328(PQKBManifestationID)11648828(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001168328(PQKBWorkID)11151703(PQKB)11631400(MiAaPQ)EBC1460927(Au-PeEL)EBL1460927(CaPaEBR)ebr10781163(CaONFJC)MIL529071(OCoLC)860907786(FINmELB)ELB138763(EXLCZ)99255000000112843720180331e20041966 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrThe social anthropology of complex societies /edited by Michael BantonLondon ;New York :Routledge,2004.1 online resource (201 p.)Routledge library editions. Anthropology and ethnography. Social and cultural anthropology ;IIIFirst published in 1966 by Tavistock Publications.Derived from material presented at a conference sponsored by the Association of Social Anthropologists of the Commonwealth.0-415-33028-9 1-299-97820-7 Includes bibliographical references.Cover; Half Title; Title Page; Copyright Page; Original Title Page; Original Copyright Page; Dedication; Table of Contents; Introduction; Kinship, Friendship, and Patron-Client Relations in Complex Societies; Core and periphery in complex societies; Corporate kin groups in complex societies; Corporate communities; Individual-centered coalitions; Persistent functions of the family; Cooperation of kin in non-kin situations; Kinds of friendship; Friendship: a Middle-American case; Corporate groups and migrant populations; 'Open' organization and migrant populations; CliquesPatron-client relationsVariations in patron -client ties; The problem of national character; Acknowledgement; References; Sociological Characteristics of Small Territories and their Implications for Economic Development; Scale and roles; Scale, values, and alternatives; Scale and magico-religious practices; Scale and jural relations; Scale and political structure; Scale and economic development; Notes; Acknowledgement; References; Theoretical Orientations in African Urban Studies; Methodological approaches; Social surveys; Intensive studies; Urban studies and social changeThe situational approach(a) Density of settlement; (b ) Mobility; (c) Heterogeneity; (d) Demographic disproportion; (e) Economic differentiation; (f) Administrative and political limitations; Types of sociological study in towns; Structural relationships; Categorical relationships; Personal networks; The town as a single social system; Notes; References; Religious Order and Mental Disorder: A Study in a South Wales Rural Community; Expected and unexpected misfortunes; The concept of accountability; Social structure; Religious organization; Religious affiliations; Religion and behaviourConcepts of mental disorderThe prevalence of mental disorder; Reference; The Significance of Quasi-Groups in the Study of Complex Societies; Network and set; The Dewas electoral situation; Characteristics of a Dewas electoral action-set; The action-set in comparative study; Action-set and quasi-group; Conclusion; Notes; References; British Community Studies: Problems of Synthesis; I Introduction: aims; II Concepts from microsociology; 1. Spiralism; 2. The stranger: science in wartime; III British community studies: a field surveyed; IV British community studies: a continuum suggestedV Concepts in the continuum1. Concepts from classical sociology; 2. Concepts from modern sociology; 3. Concepts from social anthropology; 4. A concept from outside: social redundancy; VI Social anthropology: the study of process; 1. Two case studies: a North Wales and a South Wales village; 2. Language and education in South Wales; VII Process in urban research: a dramatic approach; 1. The drama in events; 2. The drama in ceremonial; 3. The drama in custom; VIII Conclusion: drama and continuum synthesized; Acknowledgements; References; Notes on ContributorsThis volume illustrates how much the study of social anthropologists has encompassed other, non-primitive societies: rural Italy, urban Africa, village politics in India and the smaller ex-colonial territories of Fiji and Mauritius are just some of the areas covered by the book. The position and contribution of British community studies is also examined, illustrating how micro-sociology can be made relevant to macro-sociology.<BR> Originally published 1966.Routledge library editions.Anthropology and ethnography ;III.SociologyAnthropologySociology.Anthropology.201Banton Michael1926-84820Association of Social Anthropologists of the Commonwealth.FlBoTFGFlBoTFGBOOK9910790665503321Social anthropology of complex societies156832UNINA