
Sir Edward Evans-Pritchard's classic writings on the Nuer of southern Sudan have made them one of the most famous peoples in ethnographic literature. When the writings were first published half a century ago, they created a new agenda for social anthropology. Kinship and Marriage among the Nuer is the second of his trilogy on the society and culture of this pastoral people. It vividly portrays the experience of growing up in a Nuer community, describing daily life, marriage, sex, death, and birth. It also makes clear the essential difference between the discourse of political association and that of kinship, and shows the part played by the kinship system in Nuer society as a whole. Now published for the first time in paperback, this edition has a substantial introduction by Wendy James in which she assesses the importance of Evans-Pritchard's work and places it in the context of recent developments in social anthropology.
This work investigates the structural role of kinship and marriage systems in maintaining social order and political cohesion among the Nuer people of southern Sudan. Sir Edward E. Evans-Pritchard, a foundational figure in British social anthropology, utilizes extensive field observations to analyze how domestic relationships and lineage structures function as the primary framework for Nuer society. By examining the intersection of daily life and social obligation, the author argues that kinship serves as a vital mechanism for navigating political association and cultural identity.
What You Will Find
Experts classify this text as a foundational pillar of 20th-century ethnographic literature that remains essential for students of social anthropology. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which provides a rigorous, systematic look at pastoral social structures.
Page Count:
224
Publication Date:
1990-07-26
Publisher:
Clarendon Press
ISBN-10:
0198278470
ISBN-13:
9780198278474
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