1 Introduction:Networks, Ethnography and Emergence
Chapter 2 Problems of Analysis
Chapter 3 Ethnographic Setting
4 Theories, Rules and Exceptions
Chapter 5 Network Models and Complexity: Measures, Graphs, and
Context
Chapter 6 Clan Structures and Dynamics
Chapter 7 Marriage, Rank and Migration: Fractality in Social
Structure
Chapter 8 Demography, Structure, and Social Change
Chapter 9 Decentralized Leadership and Network Cohesion
Chapter 10 Graphic Approaches to Nomad Solidarity: The Endoconical
Clan
Chapter 11 Conclusions
Douglas White is Professor of Anthropology and Social Networks at the University of California, Irvine. Ulla Johansen is Professor of Anthropology at the University of Cologne, Germany.
This book presents a brilliant example of the application of
network analysis to kinship. . . .The applied value of this study
cannot be overestimated because kin structures still play important
social (and sometimes political) roles in many societies. . . .This
pioneering study establishes methodology that will be in demand in
anthropology, political science, economics, legal studies, and
Middle Eastern studies.
*Audrey Korotayev, research fellow, Oriental Institute, Russian
Academy of Sciences*
Network analysis, as White has been developing it and as he and
Johansen apply it here, is not just one technique or method but a
whole armamentarium of them, united under a system of general and
powerful conceptions of social organization as such. It is such an
enormous advance over what anthropologists called network analysis
in the 1960s and 70s that it is almost a type of negative
advertising to call it by the same name, yet there is a connection.
White and Johansen actually deliver what those analyses
promised—and then keep going.
*Murray J. Leaf, University of Texas at Dallas*
[W]hat could be the most important book in anthropology in fifty
years begins with an introduction to network analysis in relation
to ethnography, providing a succinct history of network thinking
including very recent developments in various disciplines about
network topology and dynamics.... In addition to its contribution
to our understanding kinship theory in a quite new way, this book
makes an outstanding contribution by reintroducing ethnographers to
the network perspective.... The authors point outthat 'taking a
network path to coding and analysis' in ethnography leads to the
ability to understand the emergence of social structural phenomena
that would otherwise remain unobserved.... Whether the reader is
interested in kinship, in economics, in politics or history, this
book should be considered must reading..
*International Journal of Middle East Studies*
This book shows how network analysis can usefully illuminate
complex ethnographic situations that result from long term
fieldwork in ways that go beyond the intuitive results of
functionalism, (social) structuralism and practice theory.
*Nelson Graburn, University of California, Berkeley*
[W]hat could be the most important book in anthropology in fifty
years begins with an introduction to network analysis in relation
to ethnography, providing a succinct history of network thinking
including very recent developments in various disciplines about
network topology and dynamics.... In addition to its contribution
to our understanding kinship theory in a quite new way, this book
makes an outstanding contribution by reintroducing ethnographers to
the network perspective.... The authors
point out that 'taking a network path to coding and analysis' in
ethnography leads to the ability to understand the emergence of
social structural phenomena that would otherwise remain
unobserved.... Whether the reader is interested in kinship, in
economics, in politics or history, this book should be considered
must reading.
*International Journal of Middle East Studies*
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