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Northern Plainsmen - Adaptive Strategy and Agrarian Life (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R3,909
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Northern Plainsmen - Adaptive Strategy and Agrarian Life (Hardcover)
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Total price: R3,919
Discovery Miles: 39 190
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A study of a rural region and plural society, this book is a
distinctive contribution to anthropology, in that it brings the
conceptual framework of that discipline to bear on a contemporary
agrarian society and its historical development, rather than on
peasant or tribal peoples; cultural ecology, in that it shows the
nature of the adaptations of four distinctive social groups to the
environment of the Canadian Great Plains; the study of social and
economic change, as it describes cultural patterns and mechanisms
that are relevant to agrarian development the world over; and North
American studies, in as much as it deals with community life in the
classic sequence of settlement of the Western Plains.The book is,
focused throughout on the adaptation of human societies to their
environment. Four groups are described: the Cree Indians, the
aboriginal inhabitants of the area who have lost all organic
relationship to natural resources and who have devised ingenious
methods for manipulating the social environment; ranchers, whose
specialized production is based upon resources used in their
natural state; homestead farmers, whose maladjusted small-farm
economy, after initial setbacks, achieved a degree of stability
through interventions by government in their adaptations to nature
and the market economy; and the Hutterian Brethren, whose
adaptation consisted primarily of the introduction to the region of
a new kind of social organization.This book combines the
anthropological concept of culture and the framework of ecology in
the study of a modern social milieu; it focuses on a region rather
than on a single culture, people, or community, so that the
interplay of several social groups can be appreciated; and it
elaborates contemporary anthropological and ecological theory in a
manner that makes it applicable to the understanding of
contemporary agrarian societies.John W. Bennett was emeritus
professor of anthropology at Washington University, St. Louis. He
served as president of the American Ethnological Society and the
Society for Applied Anthropology, and was a member of the editorial
boards of the Annual Review of Anthropology and Reviews in
Anthropology. Among his books are The Ecological Transition:
Cultural Anthropology and Human Adaptation (1976, 2005), Classic
Anthropology: Critical Essays, 1944-1996 (1997), and Human Ecology
as Human Behavior: Essays in Environmental and Development
Anthropology (1995).
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