The first edition of System, Structure, and Contradiction was an
important step in merging the materialist determinism of the
structuralist Marxists with the cultural, ideological approach favored
by anthropologists. By reconciling these two traditionally warring
schools of thought, the author provided a more nuanced understanding of
the various factors that drive social change and social complexity.
Though viewed through the lens of an ethnographic and historical case
study of the Kachin of Burman, Friedman's theory has had a major impact
on the work of archaeologists, anthropologists, world-systems scholars,
and Marxist theorists alike. This new edition of Friedman's much-cited
work contains the full text of the original volume (never published in
North America) along with two related articles by the author, and a
comprehensive new introduction that brings his theoretical notions, and
the debate over this book, to the present. A classic work of
anthropological and social theory, it will be of interest to scholars
and their advanced students in anthropology and related disciplines.