Marx and Marxism
In: Key Sociologists
69 results
Sort by:
In: Key Sociologists
Peter Worsley's studies at Cambridge were interrupted by war service as a communist officer in the colonial forces in Africa and India, and it was here that he developed a keen interest in anthropology. He work in mass education in Tanganyika and then studied with Max Gluckman at Manchester University. Banned from re-entering Africa, Worsley went to Australia where he was banned once more, this time from New Guinea, yet he did succeed in completing field-research for his Ph.D. on an Australian Aboriginal tribe. His subsequent book on 'Cargo' cults in Melanesia is now regarded as a classic, but his left-wing politics ensured that he could not get a job in anthropology, so he switched to sociology, on his return to Manchester
Green knowledge: the living environment of an Australian tribe -- Finding the way: navigating the Pacific -- Sickness as a way of life -- Remembering the past, interpreting the present, imagining the future -- An absence of culture
In: A Pelican Book: Sociology
World Affairs Online
In: The open university
In: set book
In: Penguin education
In: The nature of human society series
World Affairs Online
In: Journal of Southeast Asian studies, Volume 53, Issue 4, p. 816-818
ISSN: 1474-0680
In: Jurnal Kajian Bali (Journal of Bali Studies), Volume 11, Issue 1, p. 238
ISSN: 2580-0698
The present essay is about the interpretation of paintings and how an interest which Balinese painters display in gender relationships in the context of illustrations of ritual in their narrative works on the one hand, contrasts with strong expressions of Dutch disapproval of the despotic nature of the rule of Balinese kings and consequentially the unjust treatment of women in Balinese society on the other. With this in mind, the present paper first considers the representation of gender relationships in a number of Balinese paintings from the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries and then turns to a discussion of the understanding of Balinese gender relationships of two members of Dutch colonial society in the Dutch East Indies, one a senior bureaucrat, Graaf C.W.S van Hogendorp and the other the protestant missionary R. van Eck. I discuss a play by Graaf C.W.S van Hogendorp, 'Pièce de Circonstance sur la conquête de Bali 1846', written to celebrate the victory of the Dutch army over the Kingdom of Buleleng in 1846 and an article about 'Het Lot der Vrouw op Bali' ('The lot of the Balinese woman'), published in the journal Tijdschrift voor Indische Taal-, Land-, en Volkenkunde in 1872 by the protestant missionary R. van Eck.
In: Journal of Southeast Asian studies, Volume 52, Issue 1, p. 149-152
ISSN: 1474-0680