Henry A. Selby
Author
Description
This ethnographic study of the Zapotec Indians of a small community in the Valley of Oaxaca, Mexico, reveals that the notion of the social basis of deviance is implicit in Zapotec thinking. Zapotecs recognize that crime and deviance arise out of society, and their methods of reducing criminal behavior are based on social networks and their dynamics. The author's consideration of witchcraft and deviant sexual behavior among the Zapotecs demonstrates...
Description
"A School of American Research book." "This volume is the result of a conference held on the days of March 18-22, 1974, at the School of American Research, in Santa Fe, NM." Bibliography: p.239-247. Includes index.
Cultural anthropology's main contribution to science has always been the investigation of the range of human cultures and the demonstration of the variety, including variety in symbols and meanings, in these cultures. In recent years,...