ABSTRACT

First published in 1976, this Routledge Revivals reissue presents an analysis of the Swat Pathans, the people of the North-West Frontier Province of Pakistan, who belong administratively to Pakistan despite being a fiercely independent group, with their own codes and ways of life. Akbar S. Ahmed, who knows the Swat Pathans well through his family connections, presents a clear and sophisticated analysis of their complex society. The study provides an anthropological and critical re-examination of the ethnography of the Swat Pathans and the author suggests specific alternative models of social organization.

The book also represents an important contribution to the general debate in the social sciences between the ‘methodological individualists’ and the ‘methodological holists’, and challenges some of the theoretical and methodological premises in anthropology. In particular the author is critical of Professor Fredrik Barth’s study of Swat Pathans, for he believes that the ‘Swat models’ have inadvertently become the basis for generalized, and often incorrect, understanding of models of Pathan socio-political organization in the social sciences.

chapter 1|18 pages

Introduction

part |49 pages

Part I

chapter 2|11 pages

The Swat Pathans and the theory of games

chapter 3|14 pages

The Swat Pathan understood

chapter 4|23 pages

The Swat Pathan misunderstood

part |40 pages

Part III

chapter 7|27 pages

Millennium and charisma among Pathans

chapter 8|12 pages

Models and method in anthropology