The Enduring Pursuit: Land, Time and Social Relationships in Anthropological Models of Hunter-Gatherers and Hunters' Images

This paper examines recent models that have sought to character­ize the distinctive features of hunter-gatherer societies that distin­guish them from small-scale agricultural or pastoral societies. The survey also shows that hunter-gatherers are repeatedly portrayed as living in a distinctive tempor...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Feit, Harvey A.
Other Authors: None
Format: Book Part
Language:English
Published: Berg Publishers 1994
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11375/23515
Description
Summary:This paper examines recent models that have sought to character­ize the distinctive features of hunter-gatherer societies that distin­guish them from small-scale agricultural or pastoral societies. The survey also shows that hunter-gatherers are repeatedly portrayed as living in a distinctive temporal frame, one in which the juxtaposition of a lengthy past and an instantaneous present obviate an enduring present oriented to a future shaped by human agency. I consider these models in relation to some long-established and recent ethnographic and ethno-historic counter evidence, which I suggest has broad implications; and in relation to the cultural images crafted by subarctic Waswanipi Cree Indian hunters in Quebec. This survey concludes that there is no distinctive social feature of substance or consequence with which to distinguish hunter-gatherer societies. Social Sciences and Humani­ties Research Council of Canada, the McMaster University Arts Research Board, and the U.S. National Science Foundation for a conference travel grant.