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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Suzanne E. JosephPublisher: University Press of Florida Imprint: University Press of Florida Dimensions: Width: 16.00cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 23.60cm Weight: 0.456kg ISBN: 9780813044613ISBN 10: 0813044618 Pages: 256 Publication Date: 30 September 2013 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsReviews""Approaches Bedouin society in Lebanon from a novel angle. Emerging largely from participant observation and semi-structured interviews . . ., it tells a story from an under-researched perspective: women's views on life, social reproduction, and social relations.""--Anthropos ""Challenges Western feminist views on gender and reproduction in the Third World, critiques ideas of Marx and Malthus on population and poverty, and argues for a nuanced understanding of fertility and bonding among people everywhere, but especially among the Arab agro-pastoralists at the core of this research.""--Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute Challenges Western feminist views on gender and reproduction in the Third World, critiques ideas of Marx and Malthus on population and poverty, and argues for a nuanced understanding of fertility and bonding among people everywhere, but especially among the Arab agro-pastoralists at the core of this research. --Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute Approaches Bedouin society in Lebanon from a novel angle. Emerging largely from participant observation and semi-structured interviews . . ., it tells a story from an under-researched perspective: women's views on life, social reproduction, and social relations. --Anthropos This is a valuable ethnographic work in medical anthropology, which integrates questions of bio politics and culture into discussions of social production and reproduction. Nomadic Peoples Approaches Bedouin society in Lebanon from a novel angle. Emerging largely from participant observation and semi-structured interviews . . ., it tells a story from an under-researched perspective: women s views on life, social reproduction, and social relations. Anthropos Challenges Western feminist views on gender and reproduction in the Third World, critiques ideas of Marx and Malthus on population and poverty, and argues for a nuanced understanding of fertility and bonding among people everywhere, but especially among the Arab agro-pastoralists at the core of this research. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute Approaches Bedouin society in Lebanon from a novel angle. Emerging largely from participant observation and semi-structured interviews . . ., it tells a story from an under-researched perspective: women s views on life, social reproduction, and social relations. Anthropos Challenges Western feminist views on gender and reproduction in the Third World, critiques ideas of Marx and Malthus on population and poverty, and argues for a nuanced understanding of fertility and bonding among people everywhere, but especially among the Arab agro-pastoralists at the core of this research. --Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute Approaches Bedouin society in Lebanon from a novel angle. Emerging largely from participant observation and semi-structured interviews . . ., it tells a story from an under-researched perspective: women's views on life, social reproduction, and social relations. --Anthropos This is a valuable ethnographic work in medical anthropology, which integrates questions of bio politics and culture into discussions of social production and reproduction. Nomadic Peoples Approaches Bedouin society in Lebanon from a novel angle. Emerging largely from participant observation and semi-structured interviews . . ., it tells a story from an under-researched perspective: women s views on life, social reproduction, and social relations. Anthropos Challenges Western feminist views on gender and reproduction in the Third World, critiques ideas of Marx and Malthus on population and poverty, and argues for a nuanced understanding of fertility and bonding among people everywhere, but especially among the Arab agro-pastoralists at the core of this research. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute Author InformationSuzanne E. Joseph is associate professor of anthropology at Zayed University, Abu Dhabi. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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