Malinowski: "In the writing up of his results the modern anthropologist is naturally tempted to add his wider, somewhat diffused and intangible experiences to his descriptions of definite fact; to present the details of custom, belief, and organization against the background of a general theory of primitive culture. This little book is the outcome of a field worker’s yielding to such temptation. In extenuation of this lapse —if lapse it be— I should like to urge the great need for more theory in anthropological jurisprudence, especially theory born from actual contact with savages. I should also point out that in this work reflections and generalizations stand out clearly from the descriptive paragraphs. Last, not least, I should like to claim that my theory is not made of conjecture or hypothetical reconstruction but is simply an attempt at formulating the problem, at introducing precise concepts and clear definitions into the subject."
Visionary Women : How Rachel Carson, Jane Jacobs, Jane Goodall, and Alice Waters Changed Our World
Andrea Barnet
audiobookOrdfronten Podcast #1 : Sven Wollter om Hon, Han och Döden – Live
Sven Wollter
audiobookThe Case for Good Jobs : How Great Companies Bring Dignity, Pay, and Meaning to Everyone's Work
Zeynep Ton
audiobookAround the World in 80 Words
Paul Anthony Jones
audiobookThe Cruel Victory : The French Resistance, D-Day and the Battle for the Vercors 1944
audiobookRevolver: Sam Colt and the Six-Shooter That Changed America
Jim Rasenberger
bookMeningen med landet
David Jonstad
audiobookbookYhdysvaltain demokratian synty : Unionin idea ja amerikkalainen historiakäsitys
Ari Helo
bookConstitución política de Costa Rica de 1949
Varios Autores
bookThe Breach : The Untold Story of the Investigation into January 6th
Denver Riggleman
audiobookChina's Economy
Arthur R. Kroeber
audiobookThe Story of Prague
Francis hrabe Lützow
book