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Radcliffe-Brown's Contributions to the Study of Social Organization.

Authors :
Fortes, Meyer
Source :
British Journal of Sociology; Mar1955, Vol. 6 Issue 1, p16-30, 15p
Publication Year :
1955

Abstract

This article focuses on the contributions of professor A. R. Radcliffe-Brown to the study of social organization. What Radcliffe-Brown did was to distinguish between the search for historical and evolutionary origins, the preoccupation of ethnology, and the study of the laws of custom and social organization, the province of social anthropology. Those social scientists other than anthropologists who know Radcliffe-Brown's work, tend to pay attention only to his methodological articles. But the vital theoretical contribution lies in his ethnographically centered papers. It is in them that Radcliffe-Brown's adherence to the view that there are laws of social life which can be established by systematic and empirical investigation, is brilliantly justified. These papers are mainly concerned with problems of social organization, or as Radcliffe-Brown now prefers to call it, social structure. Radcliffe-Brown shows that the merging or identification of alternate generations fits in with the widespread concept of the completion of the cycle of the generations in three successive steps, and with the contrasting roles of grandparent and parent in family systems. It is ethnography based on a theoretical discipline, the discipline of structural analysis as first given shape by Radcliffe-Brown.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00071315
Volume :
6
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
British Journal of Sociology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
17390260
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.2307/587222