Beyond Textuality: Asceticism and Violence in Anthropological InterpretationGilles Bibeau, Ellen E. Corin No detailed description available for "Beyond Textuality". |
Contents
Gilles Bibeau and Ellen E Corin | 3 |
Keesing | 49 |
Charles Le Blanc | 57 |
John Leavitt | 79 |
Chevalier | 111 |
Gananath Obeyesekere | 145 |
Ellen E Corin | 173 |
John G Galaty | 193 |
Kwaio framing of an act of violence | 209 |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
action analysis anthropology anthropophagy bard body British cannibalism causality central Chinese Chorol classical coherence common concept context Cook Cook's Corin cultural demon discourse divination divinatory dominant egocentric particulars elements ethnographic European example expressed fantasy flesh frame ganying Goddess gods gongmo Hawaiians hermeneutics Hindu Huainan zi human individual intellectual interpretation inversion Islamic James Cook killed Kumaoni Kwaio Ladakh language Lévi-Strauss lineage logic logocentric Maasai Mahābhārata Maori Maori cannibalism margins meaning metaphor metatexts metonymic mind Mizuka moral narrative natives nature no'o notion Paris person perspective philosophical Polynesian possession practice pragmatic pronouns Purāṇa question reality reference relations relationship resonance Revelation Ricoeur ritual Sanskrit scorpion semantic semiotic Seuil signifier signs Śiva social society South Asia specific speech spirits śruti story structural symbolic Taoist textual things thinking thought tion tradition transgression translation University Press Verb Western words Yahwism Yudhisthira