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"The thesis is radical," writes Marshall Sahlins of this landmark
text in anthropology and political science. "We conventionally
define the state as the regulation of violence; it may be the
origin of it. Clastres's thesis is that economic expropriation and
political coercion are inconsistent with the character of tribal
society - which is to say, with the greater part of human
history."Can there be a society that is not divided into oppressors
and oppressed, or that refuses coercive state apparatuses? In this
beautifully written book, Pierre Clastres offers examples of South
American Indian groups that, although without hierarchical
leadership, were both affluent and complex. In so doing he refutes
the usual negative definition of tribal society and poses its order
as a radical critique of our own Western state of power.Born in
1934, Pierre Clastres was educated at the Sorbonne; throughout the
1960s he lived with Indian groups in Paraguay and Venezuela. From
1971 until his death in 1979 he was Director of Studies at the
fifth section of the Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes in Paris and
held the Chair of Religion and Societies of the South American
Indians there.Robert Hurley is the translator of the History of
Sexuality by Michel Foucault and cotranslator of Anti-Oedipus by
Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari.
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