The Social and Political Systems of Central Polynesia
Robert Wood Williamson (1856–1932) was a British solicitor and anthropologist who worked extensively in New Guinea and Polynesia. Originally published in 1924, this book forms part of a three-volume study by Williamson on the socio-political systems of Polynesian islands near the equator. The study was written with the intention of consolidating the observations made in the extensive and various literature on the subject of Central Polynesian indigenous societies into a unified and accessible text. This book will be of value to anyone with an interest in Polynesia and the development of anthropology.
Product details
November 2013Paperback
9781107625709
504 pages
244 × 26 × 170 mm
0.8kg
Available
Table of Contents
- 14. Social and local grouping
- 15. Social and local grouping (the marae as a social centre)
- 16. Matrilineal descent
- 17. Exogamy
- 18. Special relationship matters and terms (preliminary and Samoa)
- 19. Special relationship matters and terms (other islands, and observations)
- 20. Totemism (preliminary and Samoa)
- 21. Totemism (other islands)
- 22. Totemism (spirits of the dead becoming or entering into animals, and observations)
- 23. Clan badges
- 24. The social character of war
- 25. The chiefs
- 26. The middle and lower classes
- 27. Priests and sorcerers
- 28. Council meetings.