W.E.H. Stanner is a key figure in the history of Australian anthropology and Aboriginal affairs. A student of both Radcliffe-Brown and Malinowski, Stanner undertook anthropological work from the 1930s in north Australia, Africa and briefly in the Pacific. This paper traces Stanner's attempt to wrestle with the conceptual framework he inherited as a student of structural-functionalism, on the ground, during his first field research in north Australia. A selective reading of the notes Stanner made in Radcliffe-Brown's lectures, his field diaries and unpublished master's thesis provides the main materials for my discussion. Prior to travelling to the Daly River Stanner had intended to make a study of regional social organisation. The situation...
In Radcliffe-Brown’s theoretical program of social anthropology as a “natural science of society” em...
The subject of this study is a small community of Aborigines and Whites living at Kalumburu, a remot...
The acknowledgment made by the Australian anthropologist, William Stanner, in his 1968 Boyer lecture...
Between 1944 and 1963, three young white women set out to conduct anthropological field work in Abor...
A close historical analysis shows that Australia and its colonies played a key role in the making of...
This thesis is concerned with the processes of sociocultural change set in motion when the Aborigin...
This thesis presents an archaeological study of contact where an island Aboriginal society in north...
The Narungga are the Aboriginal people of Yorke Peninsula, South Australia. This thesis explores cro...
Introduction For a largely research-driven science such as anthropology the object(s) of investigati...
This thesis is concerned with the processes of sociocultural\ud change set in motion when the Aborig...
In addressing the life and legacy of R. H. Mathews (1841-1918), this article queries the emphasis on...
The first generation of Australianist anthropologists described an over-arching level of social orga...
In this paper I discuss the ethnographic encounter between two Aboriginal men and various Australian...
While my book focuses on the story of white settlement in Central Australia, this can not be underst...
'A civilized and a primitive race are in contact and, indeed, in c1ash These are the terms in which ...
In Radcliffe-Brown’s theoretical program of social anthropology as a “natural science of society” em...
The subject of this study is a small community of Aborigines and Whites living at Kalumburu, a remot...
The acknowledgment made by the Australian anthropologist, William Stanner, in his 1968 Boyer lecture...
Between 1944 and 1963, three young white women set out to conduct anthropological field work in Abor...
A close historical analysis shows that Australia and its colonies played a key role in the making of...
This thesis is concerned with the processes of sociocultural change set in motion when the Aborigin...
This thesis presents an archaeological study of contact where an island Aboriginal society in north...
The Narungga are the Aboriginal people of Yorke Peninsula, South Australia. This thesis explores cro...
Introduction For a largely research-driven science such as anthropology the object(s) of investigati...
This thesis is concerned with the processes of sociocultural\ud change set in motion when the Aborig...
In addressing the life and legacy of R. H. Mathews (1841-1918), this article queries the emphasis on...
The first generation of Australianist anthropologists described an over-arching level of social orga...
In this paper I discuss the ethnographic encounter between two Aboriginal men and various Australian...
While my book focuses on the story of white settlement in Central Australia, this can not be underst...
'A civilized and a primitive race are in contact and, indeed, in c1ash These are the terms in which ...
In Radcliffe-Brown’s theoretical program of social anthropology as a “natural science of society” em...
The subject of this study is a small community of Aborigines and Whites living at Kalumburu, a remot...
The acknowledgment made by the Australian anthropologist, William Stanner, in his 1968 Boyer lecture...