Society Against Nature: The Emergence of Human SocietiesHarvester Press, 1976 - 158 pages |
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Page 117
... sexes are enforced from an early age and become stricter at adolescence when , in many cases , brothers and sisters are not allowed to speak to each other . Among the Lethas of Burma girls and boys must even avoid looking at each other ...
... sexes are enforced from an early age and become stricter at adolescence when , in many cases , brothers and sisters are not allowed to speak to each other . Among the Lethas of Burma girls and boys must even avoid looking at each other ...
Page 124
... sexes into a commodity and the other into its traders , emerges the struggle of the sexes which has influenced humanity biologically , psychologically and historically in so many different but unmistakable ways . The existence of this ...
... sexes into a commodity and the other into its traders , emerges the struggle of the sexes which has influenced humanity biologically , psychologically and historically in so many different but unmistakable ways . The existence of this ...
Page 142
... sexes have equal rights or adult males no longer lay down the law , but because trading will have become impossible through the development of private enterprise and because commerce , industry and the police force will be incapable of ...
... sexes have equal rights or adult males no longer lay down the law , but because trading will have become impossible through the development of private enterprise and because commerce , industry and the police force will be incapable of ...
Contents
Early Primates | 1 |
Societies Without Speech | 9 |
The Demands of Social Life | 15 |
Copyright | |
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activities adaptation adolescents adult males affiliation societies alliances anthropoid aptitudes baboons basic become behaviour biological bipedalism chimpanzees clan Claude Lévi-Strauss constitute conventions correspond created culture depends differentiation distinct dominant male emergence endogamy environment established evolution evolutionary exchange existence exogamy fact father foraging function genetic hierarchy hominid Homo erectus human societies hunters hunting independent individual influence initiation instincts intellectual involved Jocasta kinship Laius less Lévi-Strauss living maintain male and female man's Marcel Mauss marriage masculine matrimonial means monkeys monosexual mother mutual natural natural selection non-reproductive objects observed Oedipus organic permanent phenomenon population predacity primate primitive societies prohibition of incest relations relationships represents reproduction restricted rhesus monkeys rituals Robert Jaulin sexes sexual sexual intercourse sexual reproduction significance skills social structure sons species status sub-group subordinate survival symbolic tendency territory Trobriand Islands unit whole woman women young