Polity
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Printed at: 06/09/2010  –  12:23:38


Feminism and Anthropology

By: Henrietta L. Moore (London School of Economics and Political Science)


Description

This is the first book which examines the nature and significance of a feminist critique in anthropology. It offers a clear introduction to, and balanced assessment of, the theoretical and practical issues raised by the development of a feminist anthropology.

Henrietta Moore situates the development of a feminist approach in anthropology within the context of the discipline, examining the ways in which women have been studied in anthropology - as well as the ways in which the study of gender has influenced the development of the discipline anthropology. She considers the application of feminist work to key areas of anthropological research, and addresses the question of what social anthropology has to contribute to contemporary feminism.

Throughout the book Henrietta Moore's analysis is informed by her own extensive fieldwork in Africa and by her concern to develop anthropological theory and method by means of feminist critique. This book will be of particular value to students in anthropology, women's studies and the social sciences.

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Paperback
Status
Available
Edition
First Edition
ISBN
9780745601137
ISBN10
0745601138
Publication Dates ROW:
Sep 1988
Publication Dates US:
Publication Dates Aus & NZ:



Format
229 x 152 mm , 6 x 9 in
Pages
256 pages

* Exam copies only available to lecturers for whom the book may be suitable as a course text.
Please note: Sales representation and distribution for Polity titles is provided by John Wiley and Sons Ltd.

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Reviews

'... essential reading ...' Sociology

'I do not know of any other work which gives one such a sense of the scope and substance of feminist scholarship within anthropology. This is no abstract debate about possibilities: with rare intelligence Moore sanely and superbly charts what has already been done and consequently what lies ahead. The book's breadth of vision is generous, its approach authoritative, and its final critique of the limitations as well as the promises of feminist anthropology resounding' Marilyn Strathern, University of Manchester

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Table of Contents

Preface and Acknowledgements.

1. Feminism and Anthropology: The Story of a Relationship.

2. Gender and Status: Explaining the Position of Women.

3. Understanding Women's Work: Kinship, Labour and Household, Part 1. 4. The Changing Nature of Women's Lives: Kinship, Labour and Household, Part 2.

5. Women and the State.

6. Feminist Anthropology: What Difference Does It Make?.

Notes.

References.

Index.

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