They Make Themselves Work and Play Among the Baining of Papua New Guinea
- Binding: Hardcover
- Publisher: Univ of Chicago Pr
- Publish date: 07/01/1997
Description:
For generations of anthropologists, the Baining people have presented a challenge because of their apparent lack of cultural or social structure. This group of small-scale cultivators seems devoid of the complex belief systems and social practices that characterize other traditional peoples of Papua New Guinea. Their daily existence is mundane and repetitive in the extreme, articulated by only the most elementary familial relationships and social connections. The tontine of everyday life, however, is occasionally punctuated by stunningly beautiful festivals of masked dancers, which the Baining call play and to which they attribute no symbolic significance. In a new work sure to evoke considerable repercussions and debate in anthropological theory, Jane Fajans courageously takes on the "Baining Problem", arguing that the Baining define themselves not through intricate cosmologies or social networks, but through the meanings generated by their own productive and reproductive work.
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