Sex and Repression in Savage Society
Material type:
- 9780415255547
- 306.7/Â MAL
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Notes | Date due | Barcode | |
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MIT-WPU Basement | 306.7/ MAL (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Checked out | School of Liberal Art | 29/01/2025 | 208203 |
WORDI/2024/CRB/2024 2024-11-14
During the First World War the pioneer anthropologist Bronislaw Malinowski found himself stranded on the Trobriand Islands, off the eastern coast of New Guinea. By living among the people he studied there, speaking their language and participating in their activities, he invented what became known as 'participant-observation'. This new type of ethnographic study was to have a huge impact on the emerging discipline of anthropology. In Sex and Repression in Savage Society Malinowski applied his experiences on the Trobriand Islands to the study of sexuality, and the attendant issues of eroticism, obscenity, incest, oppression, power and parenthood. In so doing, he both utilized and challenged the psychoanalytical methods being popularized at the time in Europe by Freud and others. The result is a unique and brilliant book that, though revolutionary when first published, has since become a standard work on the psychology of sex.
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