P. Bion Griffin
University of Hawaii
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Man | 1985
P. Bion Griffin; Patrick V. Kirch
Preface 1. Introduction Part I. Foundation: 2. Polynesian societies and ecosystems 3. Ancestral Polynesia Part II. Process: 4. Dispersal, colonization, and adaptation 5. The demographic factor 6. Changing environments 7. Development and intensification of production 8. Competition and conflict Part III. Transformation: 9. Tonga 10. Hawaii 11. Easter Island 12. Epilogue Glossary of Polynesian terms References Index.
Sex Roles | 1985
Madeleine J. Goodman; P. Bion Griffin; Agnes A. Estioko-Griffin; John S. Grove
Womens hunting is widely held biologically impracticable in foraging societies, chiefly because hunting is presumed incompatible with maternal responsibilities. A three-year study of hunting practices among the Agta Negrito people of northern Luzon reveals womens active participation in hunting, singly and in groups, without detriment to normal fertility and child care.
Asian Perspectives | 2001
P. Bion Griffin
Michael Vickery, a genuine ‘‘Old Cambodia Hand,’’ has o¤ered us a volume full of meat to chew on—not tough old sinew, but a large roast, ranging from rare to well done, and o¤ering much for many tastes. While the anti-Marxist, anti-materialists may foolishly suggest Vickery’s work su¤ers from ‘‘mad cow disease,’’ I suggest that for once we have a clearly, if densely, argued view of the nature of the evolving preAngkorian society of the protohistoric Khmer. The volume has, for the archaeologist, an especially clear and useful theoretical foundation. Vickery, a Marxist historian, tackles the ‘‘Asiatic Mode of Production,’’ looking at the Khmer from the earliest indications of adoption of Indic religious trappings until, but not including, the great Angkorian civilization, which begins about a.d. 800. His e¤ort is not to further examine the genealogies of rulers as an end in itself, but to use the primary source of stele texts, especially those in Old Khmer, to understand the changing organization of society, of the cults, and, most importantly, the economic system on which society, politics, and religion was based. I emphasize that the source of the data comes from the written record, carved on stone, and speaking directly to the matters of concern noted. Vickery argues that previous scholarship has neglected these data, instead focusing on kingly matters. He discusses the textbook understanding of preAngkorian Cambodia, how this understanding was gained, and what is wrong with it. He then proceeds to examine anew the contemporary data, the inscriptions that are the basic pre-Angkorian sources. He does not privilege Chinese sources, and certainly shies from adopting European models of feudalism, kingship, and social organization. His analyses of the works of the late George Coedès and of Claude Jacques, today’s pre-eminent French epigrapher and historian, are intimate and unsparing. Michael Vickery certainly has the credentials to approach the pre-Angkorian; a historian of Cambodia since the 1960s, he has published voluminously on the entire range of Khmer history and has examined the necessary data for decades. Never one to shirk raising di‰cult questions, or avoid stirring up old passions, he has, in this monograph, ‘‘told it as he sees it.’’ My review of Vickery is undertaken as an archaeologist, not a historian, epigrapher, or even as an ‘‘Old Cambodia Hand.’’ My interests in ancient Cambodia began in 1994, with my initiation of the University of Hawai‘i/East-West Center/Royal University of Fine Arts program in Khmer studies. After my colleague, Dr. Miriam Stark, assumed directorship of the archaeological program at the ancient city of Angkor Borei, my own attention turned to wide-ranging questions concerning the pre-Angkorian and Angkorian periods. I
Archive | 1981
Agnes Estioko Griffin; P. Bion Griffin
Archive | 1985
P. Bion Griffin; Agnes Estioko Griffin
Asian Perspectives | 1999
Miriam T. Stark; P. Bion Griffin; Chuch Phoeurn; Judy Ledgerwood; Michael F. Dega; Carol A. Mortland; Nancy H. Dowling; James M. Bayman; Sovath Bong; Tea Van; Chhan Chamroeun; Kyle Latinis
Asian Perspectives | 1990
P. Bion Griffin; Wilhelm G. Solheim
American Anthropologist | 2001
P. Bion Griffin
Asian Perspectives | 1999
P. Bion Griffin; Judy Ledgerwood; Chuch Phoeurn
Archive | 1971
P. Bion Griffin; Keith H. Basso; Mark P. Leone