Society Against the State: Essays in Political Anthropology/ Pierre Clastres
Material type:
- 9780942299014
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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SAF Reference Library | Political Science | JC571-605 33.627 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 4917 | |
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SAF Reference Library | Political Science | JC571-605 33.627 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available |
In this seminal, founding work of political anthropology, Pierre Clastres takes on some of the most abiding and essential questions of human civilization: What is power? What is society? How, among all the possible modes of political organization, did we come to choose the monolithic State model and its accompanying regimes of coercion? As Clastres shows, other and different regimes do indeed exist, and they existed long before ours ― regimes in which power, though it manifests itself everywhere, is nonetheless noncoercive. In such societies, political culture, and cultural practices generally, are not only not submissive to the State model, but they actively avert it, rendering impossible the very conditions in which coercive power and the State could arise. How then could our own “societies of the State” ever have arisen from these rich and complex stateless societies, and why?
English
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