Stephen Hugh-Jones
National University of Colombia
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Featured researches published by Stephen Hugh-Jones.
Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute | 1995
Janet Carsten; Stephen Hugh-Jones
1. Introduction Janet Carsten and Stephen Hugh-Jones 2. Houses and hierarchies in island Southeast Asia Roxana Waterson 3. The resurrection of the house amongst the Zafimaniry of Madagascar Maurice Bloch 4. The hearth-group, the conjugal couple and the symbolism of the rice meal among the Kelabit of Sarawak Monica Janowski 5. Houses in Langkawi: stable structures or mobile homes? Janet Carsten 6. Having your house and eating it: houses and siblings in Ara, South Sulawesi Thomas Gibson 7. The Lio house: building, category, idea, value Signe Howell 8. Houses and hierarchy: the view from a South Moluccan society Susan McKinnon 9. Houses, places and people: community and continuity in Guiana Peter Riviere 10. The houses of Mebengokre (Kayapo) of Central Brazil: a new door to their social organization Vanessa Lea 11. Inside-out and back-to-front: the Maloca and the house in northwest Amazonia Stephen Hugh-Jones.
Archive | 1995
Stephen Hugh-Jones; Janet Carsten
I n recent years it has become increasingly evident that the small, fragmented tribes of Amazonian ethnography, twin products of colonial genocide and academic classificatory ethnogenesis, are poor guides for understanding an area once integrated by complex regional systems. If anthropologists have long recognized a fundamental unity beneath the manifest linguistic and cultural diversity of Amazonia, progress towards synthesis has been relatively slow. In studies of kinship, progress has often been hampered by the use of outmoded and alien theoretical models which delimit an artificially narrow field of study and square uneasily with local idioms. Although there are a number of publications on architectural and spatial symbolism in different parts of lowland South America, many treat architecture as a sphere of analysis relatively independent from kinship and social structure. In this chapter I want to extend previous explorations of the significance of Northwest Amazonian architecture in a new direction by suggesting that their communal longhouses provide the eastern Tukanoan-speaking peoples with a way of conceptualizing their own social structure, one which is misrepresented and distorted when translated as unilineal descent. At the same time, I shall examine whether such native idioms are usefully included under Levi-Strausss (1983a, 1987) general rubric of ‘house societies’. My argument can be summarized as follows. Tukanoan social structure has typically been characterized in terms of patrilineal descent, virilocal residence, symmetric alliance, and a Dravidian relationship terminology, and described as an open-ended social system made up of a number of intermarrying exogamous language groups each internally divided into sets of ranked clans.
Archive | 1995
Janet Carsten; Stephen Hugh-Jones
1. Introduction Janet Carsten and Stephen Hugh-Jones 2. Houses and hierarchies in island Southeast Asia Roxana Waterson 3. The resurrection of the house amongst the Zafimaniry of Madagascar Maurice Bloch 4. The hearth-group, the conjugal couple and the symbolism of the rice meal among the Kelabit of Sarawak Monica Janowski 5. Houses in Langkawi: stable structures or mobile homes? Janet Carsten 6. Having your house and eating it: houses and siblings in Ara, South Sulawesi Thomas Gibson 7. The Lio house: building, category, idea, value Signe Howell 8. Houses and hierarchy: the view from a South Moluccan society Susan McKinnon 9. Houses, places and people: community and continuity in Guiana Peter Riviere 10. The houses of Mebengokre (Kayapo) of Central Brazil: a new door to their social organization Vanessa Lea 11. Inside-out and back-to-front: the Maloca and the house in northwest Amazonia Stephen Hugh-Jones.
Archive | 1995
Janet Carsten; Stephen Hugh-Jones
1. Introduction Janet Carsten and Stephen Hugh-Jones 2. Houses and hierarchies in island Southeast Asia Roxana Waterson 3. The resurrection of the house amongst the Zafimaniry of Madagascar Maurice Bloch 4. The hearth-group, the conjugal couple and the symbolism of the rice meal among the Kelabit of Sarawak Monica Janowski 5. Houses in Langkawi: stable structures or mobile homes? Janet Carsten 6. Having your house and eating it: houses and siblings in Ara, South Sulawesi Thomas Gibson 7. The Lio house: building, category, idea, value Signe Howell 8. Houses and hierarchy: the view from a South Moluccan society Susan McKinnon 9. Houses, places and people: community and continuity in Guiana Peter Riviere 10. The houses of Mebengokre (Kayapo) of Central Brazil: a new door to their social organization Vanessa Lea 11. Inside-out and back-to-front: the Maloca and the house in northwest Amazonia Stephen Hugh-Jones.
Archive | 1995
Janet Carsten; Stephen Hugh-Jones
Archive | 2001
Stephen Hugh-Jones
Archive | 2017
Thomas A. Gregor; Donald Tuzin; Stephen Hugh-Jones
Journal de la Société des Américanistes | 2016
Stephen Hugh-Jones
Mundo Amazónico | 2017
Stephen Hugh-Jones
Journal de la Société des Américanistes | 2008
Stephen Hugh-Jones