ABSTRACT

First Published in 1991. In the 1980s many anthropologists rejected the classic concern with the structure and logic of social organisation and embraced instead a concern with process, with the fluidity of events and individual strategy. Through its analysis of a Melanesian society and the ways it has changed in the twentieth century this book addresses the relationship between the classic structural approach and the more recent processual one. The society analysed is Ponam, located on a small island in Papua New Guinea. The book describes Ponam kinship and ceremonial exchange, and so compliments the authors’' analysis of Onam economic organisation in 'Wage, Tarde and Exchange in Melanesia'. Like its companion volume, this book locates Ponanm in its broader social, political and economic environment.

chapter |28 pages

Introduction

Approaching Ponam society

chapter Chapter One|26 pages

The organisation of Ponam kinship

chapter Chapter Two|28 pages

Colonial history and changes in kamals

chapter Chapter Three|27 pages

Marriage and ceremonial exchange

chapter Chapter Four|28 pages

Changes in marriage and ceremonial exchange

chapter Chapter Five|24 pages

The representation of kamals in exchange

chapter Chapter Six|24 pages

The representation of kindreds in exchange

chapter Chapter Seven|34 pages

The process of exchange