Marcel Mauss: A Centenary Tribute

Front Cover
Wendy James, N. J. Allen
Berghahn Books, 1998 - Biography & Autobiography - 260 pages

Marcel Mauss, successor of Emile Durkheim and one-time teacher of Claude Levi-Strauss, continues to inspire social scientists across various disciplines. Only selected texts of Mauss's work have been translated into English, but of these, some, as for instance his Essay on the Gift, have proved of key significance for the development of anthropology internationally.

Recently and starting in France, the interest in Mauss's work has increased noticeably as witnessed by several reassessments of its relevance to current social theory. This collection of original essays is the first to introduce the English-language reader to the current re-evaluation of his ideas in continental Europe. Themes include the post-structuralist appraisal of exchange, the anthropology of the body, practical techniques, gesture systems, the notions of substance, materiality, and the social person. There are fresh insights into comparative politics and history, modern forms of charity, and new readings of some political and historical aspects of Mauss's work that bear on the analysis of regions such as Africa and the Middle East, relatively neglected by the Durkheimian school and by structuralism. This volume is a timely tribute to mark the centenary of Mauss' early work and confirms the continuing relevance of his ideas.

 

Contents

Wendy James
3
Marcel Mauss
29
W S F Pickering
43
Alexander Gofman
63
Bruno Karsenti
71
Tim Jenkins
83
Alain Testart
97
totality exchange and Islam in
111
Ilana Silber
134
and power
151
N J Allen
175
Nathan Schlanger
192
Claudine Haroche
213
Wendy James
226
Select Bibliography
249
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About the author (1998)

Wendy James has taught at the University of Khartoum and has research experience in the Sudan and Ethiopia. She is currently Professor of Social Anthropology at the University of Oxford. After studying classics and medicine N. J. Allen (1939-2020) qualified in Social Anthropology at Oxford, undertaking fieldwork in Nepal. He was Reader in the Social Anthropology of South Asia at the University of Oxford.