The terms of the debate about anthropological approaches to the value question in India have been set by Dumont, whose theories were based on his ethnographic studies in North and South India, his knowledge of the Sanskrit literature, his synthesis of the comparative ethnography of India, and his studies on the history of European economic thought. His theory of affinity as a value, one element of this general theory, was based on a critique of Lévi-Strauss and was, in turn, critiqued by Trautmann, among others. On the basis of fieldwork done in Central India, I draw attention to an unexamined assumption that all three theorists share, and I also consider its consequences
The exchange of produce, goods and services within the Indian village community, executed without th...
Anthropology has played a significant political role in India, both deliberate and unintentional. Fr...
The introduction addresses the question of whether it is useful or indeed possible to develop an ant...
The terms of the debate about anthropological approaches to the value question in India have been se...
Over the last sixty-five years, since the country’s independence, trained anthropologists have condu...
The recent interest in the question of tribe-caste differences in Nepal stems very much from earlier...
Central to public debates about commonalities and differences between citizens of different religiou...
The figure of Dumont continues to loom large in the anthropology of South Asia, notwithstanding the ...
Louis Dumont (1911–98) was one of the foremost anthropologists of the 20th century and a central fig...
The Modern Anthropology of India is an accessible textbook providing a critical overview of the ethn...
New paradigms need critical discussion, and six scholars have helpfully stepped forward (in Conrribw...
International audienceThe purpose of the three texts included in this volume is to cast light on the...
Geometries of India. J.-C. Galey. This article's backdrop is India's civilization and contemporary...
This article argues that the relevance of Louis Dumont's work for ethnographic theory today is his r...
The Modern Anthropology of India is an accessible textbook providing a critical overview of the ethn...
The exchange of produce, goods and services within the Indian village community, executed without th...
Anthropology has played a significant political role in India, both deliberate and unintentional. Fr...
The introduction addresses the question of whether it is useful or indeed possible to develop an ant...
The terms of the debate about anthropological approaches to the value question in India have been se...
Over the last sixty-five years, since the country’s independence, trained anthropologists have condu...
The recent interest in the question of tribe-caste differences in Nepal stems very much from earlier...
Central to public debates about commonalities and differences between citizens of different religiou...
The figure of Dumont continues to loom large in the anthropology of South Asia, notwithstanding the ...
Louis Dumont (1911–98) was one of the foremost anthropologists of the 20th century and a central fig...
The Modern Anthropology of India is an accessible textbook providing a critical overview of the ethn...
New paradigms need critical discussion, and six scholars have helpfully stepped forward (in Conrribw...
International audienceThe purpose of the three texts included in this volume is to cast light on the...
Geometries of India. J.-C. Galey. This article's backdrop is India's civilization and contemporary...
This article argues that the relevance of Louis Dumont's work for ethnographic theory today is his r...
The Modern Anthropology of India is an accessible textbook providing a critical overview of the ethn...
The exchange of produce, goods and services within the Indian village community, executed without th...
Anthropology has played a significant political role in India, both deliberate and unintentional. Fr...
The introduction addresses the question of whether it is useful or indeed possible to develop an ant...