Babies, Bodies, and the Production of Personhood in North America and a Native Amazonian Society
- 1 December 1996
- Vol. 24 (4) , 657-694
- https://doi.org/10.1525/eth.1996.24.4.02a00040
Abstract
No abstract availableThis publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- Personhood and Illness among the KulinaMedical Anthropology Quarterly, 1996
- Reflections on Amazonian Anthropologies of the BodyMedical Anthropology Quarterly, 1996
- Social Body and Embodied Subject: Bodiliness, Subjectivity, and Sociality among the KayapoCultural Anthropology, 1995
- Contesting the natural in Japan: Moral dilemmas and technologies of dyingCulture, Medicine, and Psychiatry, 1995
- “thus are our bodies, thus was our custom”: mortuary cannibalism in an Amazonian societyAmerican Ethnologist, 1995
- Metaphors for Embarrassment and Stories of Exposure: The Not‐So‐Egocentric Self in American CultureEthos, 1994
- Reframing and Grounding Nonhuman AgencyAmerican Behavioral Scientist, 1994
- Cultivating the Body: Anthropology and Epistemologies of Bodily Practice and KnowledgeAnnual Review of Anthropology, 1993
- Concepts of the person among the Gurungs of NepalAmerican Ethnologist, 1989
- The Mirrored Self: Identity and Ritual Inversion among the Eastern BororoEthnology, 1977