The Todas
A qualified physician with interests including neurology and psychotherapy, W. H. R. Rivers (1864–1922) was influential in the rise of experimental psychology as an academic discipline. He also pioneered the 'talking cure' for shell shock during the First World War. In 1897 Rivers was appointed a University Lecturer at Cambridge, and the following year he joined a Cambridge expedition to the Torres Strait to study the indigenous people's powers of perception. Rivers' experiences in the Torres Strait kindled his interest in anthropology and kinship systems, and in 1901–2 he obtained a grant to study the genealogies and customs of the Todas, inhabitants of a high plateau in south-west India. This illustrated book, published in 1906 and regarded as a standard ethnography for half a century, was the result. It focuses on the Todas' elaborate dairy rituals, and the prayers associated with them, before describing many other beliefs, customs and ceremonies.
Product details
February 2018Paperback
9781108079129
784 pages
214 × 140 × 43 mm
1kg
76 b/w illus. 1 map 40 tables
Temporarily unavailable - available from TBC
Table of Contents
- Preface
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The Toda people
- 3. Dairies and buffaloes
- 4. The village dairy
- 5. The Ti dairy
- 6. Buffalo migrations
- 7. Ordination ceremonies
- 8. Special dairy ceremonies
- 9. The Toda gods
- 10. Prayer
- 11. The dairy ritual
- 12. Divination and magic
- 13. Sacrifice and offerings
- 14. Birth and childhood ceremonies
- 15. Funeral ceremonies
- 16. Funeral ceremonies (cont.)
- 17. Sacred days and numbers
- 18. Sacred places and objects
- 19. The Toda religion
- 20. Genealogies and population
- 21. Kinship
- 22. Marriage
- 23. Social organisation
- 24. Arts and amusements
- 25. Language
- 26. Personal names
- 27. Relations with other tribes
- 28. The clans of the Todas
- 29. Teivaliol and Tartharol
- 30. The origin and history of the Todas
- Appendices 1-4
- Glossary
- Index.