2017
DOI: 10.1590/2238-38752017v731
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The Presence of Louis Dumont: An Interview With Joel Robbins

Abstract: The interview, conducted via an exchange of e-mails, explores Joel Robbins’ contributions to the reappraisal and resurgence of Louis Dumont’s work in contemporary anthropology. Starting from the central concept of “value”, the concept of relationism proposed by Robbins is explored as the counterpart of Dumont’s holism versus individualism dualism, as well as the unfolding of these notions in an anthropology of Christianity exemplified by Robbins’ research in Melanesia.

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Cited by 4 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…One way to examine ethical values in Christian groups is to conceptualize value structures—structures that are “structural” but still “living,” that is, changing and changeable: living structuralism, as Joel Robbins has put it (Duarte, 2017: 651). Robbins (2016: 774) takes “values” here to refer to cultural conceptions of the good or desirable, not simply the desired.…”
Section: The Movements Of Valuesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…One way to examine ethical values in Christian groups is to conceptualize value structures—structures that are “structural” but still “living,” that is, changing and changeable: living structuralism, as Joel Robbins has put it (Duarte, 2017: 651). Robbins (2016: 774) takes “values” here to refer to cultural conceptions of the good or desirable, not simply the desired.…”
Section: The Movements Of Valuesmentioning
confidence: 99%