W. H. R. Rivers, who has been called 'the founder of the modern study of
social organization', exerted an immense influence on his contemporaries
and successors. This volume reprints three of his lectures, delivered in
1913 and first published in 1914, which provide a short and brilliant
exposition of his theoretical approach, and are exemplary of his
handling of ethnographic evidence. His theme is the relationship between
kinship terminologies and social organization, more particularly forms
of marriage, a subject still of lively theoretical interest. Also
included is the same author's The Genealogical Method of Anthropological
Enquiry, first published in 1910, a classic of anthropological
methodology, and Professor Raymond Firth of the London School of
Economics and Professor David Schneider of the University of Chicago
provide commentaries estimating the past and present importance of
Rivers in British and American Anthropology respectively.