ABSTRACT

In this volume Professor Firth has brought together and commented upon a number of his papers on anthropological subjects published over the last thirty years. All these essays relate in different ways to his continuing interest in the study of social process, especially in the significance within a social context of individual choice and decision. Although some specialist studies are included, e.g. the group of papers dealing with the Polynesian island of Tikopia, the main themes of the book are broad ones and there are important general essays on such topics as social change; social structure and organization; modern society in relation to scientific and technological progress; and the study of values, mysticism, and religion by anthropologists. There is also a hitherto unpublished chapter on anthropology as a developing science.

part I|170 pages

Social Organization

chapter |4 pages

Introductory Notes

chapter Chapter II|29 pages

Social Organization and Social Change (1954)

chapter Chapter III|29 pages

Some Principles of Social Organization (1955)

chapter Chapter V|22 pages

Authority and Public Opinion in Tikopia (1949)

chapter Chapter VI|26 pages

Succession to Chieftainship in Tikopia (1960)

part II|136 pages

Meanings and Values