If you wish to gain further insight into social anthropology, we suggest that you look at one or more of the following books. The general introductory texts will allow you to get a sense of the discipline's coverage, while the ethnographies will allow you to dig deeper into specific isues and give you a flavour of the primary materials you will be engaging with during your degree. We have offered a wide selection to allow you to choose texts that mesh closely with your personal interests.
General introductions to anthropology
R Astuti, J Parry and C Stafford (eds) Questions of Anthropology (Berg, 2007)
C Geertz The Interpretation of Cultures: selected essays (Basic Books, 1973)
M Engelke Think like an Anthropologist (Pelican, 2017)
Ethnographies
Gender, poetry and emotions:
L Abu-Lughod Veiled sentiments: honor and poetry in a Bedouin society (University of California Press, 1986)
Cyber-ethnography, the virtual:
T Boellstorff Coming of Age in Second Life: an anthropologist explores the virtually human (Princeton University Press, 2008).
Gender, sexuality:
S G Davies Challenging Gender Norms: five genders among the Bugis in Indonesia (Thomson Wadsworth, 2007)
Hunter-gatherers, shamanism, cosmology:
P Descola The Spears of Twilight: life and death in the amazon jungle (The New Press, 1998)
Race, education and achievement:
S Fordham Blacked Out: dilemmas of race, identity and success at capital high (University of Chicago Press. 1996)
Economics, globalisation:
R J Foster Coca-Globalization: following soft drinks from New York to New Guinea (Palgrave Macmillan, 2008)
Medical ethics, law, feminism:
F Ginsburg Contested Lives: the abortion debate in an American community (University of California Press, 1998)
War, anti-colonialism/nationalism, religion:
D Lan Guns and Rain: guerillas and spirit mediums in Zimbabwe (University of California Press, 1985)
Postcolonialism, exchange, modernity:
C Piot Remotely Global: village modernity in West Africa (University of Chicago Press, 1999)
Christianity, morality, conversion:
J Robbins Becoming Sinners: christianity and moral torment in a Papua New Guinea society (University of California Press, 2004)
Introductions to law
J Adams and R Brownsword Understanding Law (Sweet and Maxwell, 2006)
T Bingham The Rule of Law (Penguin, 2011)
A Bradney et al How to Study Law (Sweet and Maxwell, 2005)
F Cownie, A Bradney and M Burton English Legal System in Context (Oxford University Press, 6th ed, 2013)
E Finch and S Fafinski Legal Skills (5th edition, Oxford University Press, 2015)
Legal issues explored from an anthropological perspective
A fascinating and influential overview of the ways in which legal systems and punishments reflect historical/cultural shifts in the way in which power is practiced and statecraft is conceptualised:
M Foucault Discipline and Punish: the birth of the prison (Penguin, 1979)
Current "gold standard" of legal anthropology; focuses on how law is brought into being:
B Latou The Making of Law. an ethnography of the conseil d'etat (Polity Press, 2009)
Colonial law, legacies for postcolonial societies:
M Mamdani From Subject to Citizen: contemporary Africa and the legacy of late colonialism (Princeton University Press, 1996)
Classic account of the paradoxes of legal practice:
S Merry Getting Justice and Getting Even: legal consciousness among working-class Americans (University of Chicago Press, 1990)
Fascinating insight into how law and punishment operates in Melanesia:
A Reed Papua New Guinea’s Last Place: experiences of constraint in a postcolonial prison (Berghahn, 2003)