Farmers as hunters analyses from an essentially ethnographic perspective
the role of hunters in small-scale farming societies. The twelve
contributors examine the effects of hunting and mobility on behaviour,
diet, economy and material culture at both culture-specific and
cross-cultural levels. The influence of sedentism and the increasing use
of domesticates is also explored across a wide range of societies from
the American southwest and Amazonian to Africa, New Guinea and the
Phillipines. Differing perceptions of the status of animals and plants
are reviewed and cultural values are throughout given due weight in a
field where discussion too often verges on the economically
deterministic.