ABSTRACT

Originally published in 1994, the late Keith F. Otterbein’s scholarship had followed an overall design since 1962, when he began conducting comparative studies of warfare using both ethnographic and cross-cultural methods. Through a conceptual framework derived from systems theory, he made signal contributions to our understanding of the role of warfare in human social evolution. He formulated a Fraternal Interest Group theory, utilizing it to explain not only feuding and warfare but also rape and capital punishment. Believing that armed combat is learned behaviour, he posed questions about its learning process that had yet to be answered. He acted as a major synthesizer of the growing literature on warfare and led attempts among anthropologists to apply their knowledge of war and peace to current events. This volume will serve both as a useful introduction to the anthropology of war and as a needed compendium of Professor Otterbein’s ideas.

chapter Chapter Two|16 pages

Huron vs. Iroquois: A Case Study in Intertribal Warfare 1

chapter Chapter Three|8 pages

The Evolution of Zulu Warfare 1

chapter Chapter Four|42 pages

The Evolution of War: A Cross-Cultural Study

chapter Chapter Five|22 pages

Higi Armed Combat 1

chapter Chapter Six|22 pages

Cross-Cultural Studies of Armed Combat 1

chapter Chapter Seven|14 pages

A Cross-Cultural Study of Rape

chapter Chapter Eight|14 pages

Feuding: Dispute Resolution or Dispute Continuation?

chapter Chapter Ten|12 pages

The Anthropology of War

chapter Chapter Eleve|10 pages

Convergence in the Anthropological Study of Warfare

chapter Chapter Twelve|14 pages

The Dilemma of Disarming

chapter Chapter Thirteen|6 pages

A Unified Theory of Feuding and Warfare