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Volume 11 includes chapters on the analysis of dybbuk possession
and exorcism in Judaism (Y. Bilu); crisis and continuity in the
personality of an Apache shaman (L. B. Boyer et al.); culture shock
and the inability to mourn ( H. Stein); charismatically led groups
(L. Balter); the psychoanalytic and social aspects of telephoning
(R. Almansi); and an ethnographic study of hermaphroditism ((G.
Herdt & R. Stoller).
Volume 13 includes chapters on the contributions of Weston LaBarre
(B. Kilbourne); Geza Roheim's theory of myth (S. Morales); the
origins of Christianity (W. Meissner); myths in Inuit religion (D.
Merkur); the psychology of a Sherpa shaman (R. Paul); the
psychoanalytic study of urban legends (M. Carroll); and the dogma
of technology (H. Stein & R. Hill).
Volume 14 includes chapters on the psychoanalysis of political
commitment (P. Parin); Jews and homosexuals as strangers (P.
Parin); the analogous tasks of the psychoanalyst and the
ethnographer (M. Gehrie); cultic elements in early Christianity (W.
Meissner); Jewish apocalyptists (D. Merkur); creationist resistance
to evolution (R. Graber & L. McWhorter); sacred objects and
transitional phenomena in aboriginal Central Australia; and a
review of the contributions of Paul Parin (D. Freeman).
Volume 15 features Melford Spiro's "Culture and Human Nature" and
"The internalization of Burmese Gender Identity" along with an
interview of Spiro by B. Kilbourne and S. Bolle. Additional topics
include children's fantasy life in Papua New Guinea (F. Poole); a
psychoanthropological approach to Kagwahiv food taboos (W. Kracke);
an ethnological and Rorschach study of three groups of Australian
aborigines (R. Boyer et al.); a consideration of the "trickster" in
relation to issues of sublimation and psychosocial development; and
a review of Bettelheim's contribution to anthropology (R. Paul).
Volume 14 includes chapters on the psychoanalysis of political
commitment (P. Parin); Jews and homosexuals as strangers (P.
Parin); the analogous tasks of the psychoanalyst and the
ethnographer (M. Gehrie); cultic elements in early Christianity (W.
Meissner); Jewish apocalyptists (D. Merkur); creationist resistance
to evolution (R. Graber & L. McWhorter); sacred objects and
transitional phenomena in aboriginal Central Australia; and a
review of the contributions of Paul Parin (D. Freeman).
Volume 15 features Melford Spiro's "Culture and Human Nature" and
"The internalization of Burmese Gender Identity" along with an
interview of Spiro by B. Kilbourne and S. Bolle. Additional topics
include children's fantasy life in Papua New Guinea (F. Poole); a
psychoanthropological approach to Kagwahiv food taboos (W. Kracke);
an ethnological and Rorschach study of three groups of Australian
aborigines (R. Boyer et al.); a consideration of the "trickster" in
relation to issues of sublimation and psychosocial development; and
a review of Bettelheim's contribution to anthropology (R. Paul).
Volume 13 includes chapters on the contributions of Weston LaBarre
(B. Kilbourne); Geza Roheim's theory of myth (S. Morales); the
origins of Christianity (W. Meissner); myths in Inuit religion (D.
Merkur); the psychology of a Sherpa shaman (R. Paul); the
psychoanalytic study of urban legends (M. Carroll); and the dogma
of technology (H. Stein & R. Hill).
Volume 11 includes chapters on the analysis of dybbuk possession
and exorcism in Judaism (Y. Bilu); crisis and continuity in the
personality of an Apache shaman (L. B. Boyer et al.); culture shock
and the inability to mourn ( H. Stein); charismatically led groups
(L. Balter); the psychoanalytic and social aspects of telephoning
(R. Almansi); and an ethnographic study of hermaphroditism ((G.
Herdt & R. Stoller).
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