In their previous book, Exchange in Oceania, anthropologist Per Hage and mathematician Frank Harary demonstrated that m...
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In their previous book, Exchange in Oceania, anthropologist Per Hage and mathematician Frank Harary demonstrated that models from graph theory, a branch of pure mathematics, provide the essential basis for analyzing the great variety of exchange systems in Micronesian, Melanesian, and Polynesian societies. In this new book the authors extend these models and apply them to the analysis of communication, kinship, and classification structures in the island societies of Oceania, presenting the relevant topics from graph theory in a form accessible to the nonmathematical reader. The research problems include the formation of island empires, the social basis of dialect groups, the emergence of trade and political centers, the evolution and devolution of social stratification, the transformations of marriage and descent systems, the historical development of kinship terminologies, and the reconstruction of protosocieties. Island Networks is at once a unique and important contribution to Oceania studies, anthropology, and social network analysis in general.
Structural analysis in the social sciences Island networks
Structural analysis in the social sciences Mark Granovetter, editor Other books in the series: Ronald L. Breiger, ed., Social Mobility and Social Structure
John L. Campbell, J. Rogers Hollingsworth, and Leon N. Lindberg, eds., Governance of the American Economy David Knoke, Political Networks: The Structural Perspective Kyriakos Kontopoulos, The Logics of Social Structure
Mark S. Mizruchi and Michael Schwartz, eds., Intercorporate Relations: The Structural Analysis of Business Philippa Pattison, Algebraic Models for Social Networks Barry Wellman and S. D. Berkowitz, eds., Social Structures: A Network Approach Stanley Wasserman and Katherine Faust, Social Network Analysis: Methods and Applications Philippe Bourgois, In Search of Respect: Selling Crack in El Barrio Gary Herrigel, Industrial Constructions: The Sources of German Industrial Power
The series Structural Analysis in the Social Sciences presents
approaches that explain social behavior and institutions by reference to relations among such concrete entities as persons and organizations. This contrasts with at least four other popular strategies: (a) reductionist attempts to explain by a focus on individuals alone; (b) explanations stressing the causal primacy of such abstract concepts as ideas, values, mental harmonies, and cognitive maps (thus, "structuralism" on the Continent should be distinguished from structural analysis in the present sense); (c) technological and material determinism; (d) explanations using "variables" as the main analytic concepts (as in the "structural equation" models that dominated much of the sociology of the 1970s), where structure is that which connects variables rather than actual social entities. The social network approach is an important example of the strategy of structural analysis; the series also draws on social science theory and research that is not framed explicitly in network terms but stresses the importance of relations rather than the atomization of reductionism or the determinism of ideas, technology, or material conditions. Though the structural perspective has become extremely popular and influential in all the social sciences, it does not have a coherent identity, and no series yet pulls together such work under a single rubric. By bringing the achievements of structurally oriented scholars to a wider public, the Structural Analysis series hopes to encourage the use of this very fruitful approach.
Island networks Communication, kinship, and classification structures in Oceania Per Hage University of Utah
Frank Harary New Mexico State University and the University of Michigan
CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS
CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS Cambridge, New York, Melbourne, Madrid, Cape Town, Singapore, Sao Paulo Cambridge University Press The Edinburgh Building, Cambridge CB2 2RU, UK Published in the United States of America by Cambridge University Press, New York www.cambridge.org Information on this title: www.cambridge.org/9780521552325 © Cambridge University Press 1996 This publication is in copyright. Subject to statutory exception and to the provisions of relevant collective licensing agreements, no reproduction of any part may take place without the written permission of Cambridge University Press. First published 1996 This digitally printed first paperback version 2006 A catalogue record for this publication is available from the British Library Library of Congress Cataloguing in Publication data Hage, Per, 1935Island networks : communication, kinship, and classification structures in Oceania / Per Hage, Frank Harary. p. cm. - (Structural analysis in the social sciences) Includes bibliographical references. ISBN0-521-55232-X 1. Ethnology — Oceania — Mathematical models. 2. Structural anthropology - Oceania. 3. Graph theory. 4. Kinship - Oceania Mathematical models. 5. Social networks - Oceania - Mathematical models. 6. Oceania - Social life and customs - Mathematical models. I. Harary, Frank. II. Title. III. Series. GN663.H37 1996 306'.099-dc20 95-31639 CIP ISBN-13 978-0-521-55232-5 hardback ISBN-10 0-521-55232-X hardback ISBN-13 978-0-521-03321-3 paperback ISBN-10 0-521 -03321 -7 paperback
To Claude Levi-Strauss
Islands have always gripped man's imagination. Ernest Sabatier, Astride the Equator The legitimacy of the comparative method does not rest on massive and superficial resemblances. Analysis has to take place on a level deep enough to allow us to discern, at the base of all social life, the simple features that combine into rudimentary systems, which may eventually become the stuff of more complex and more completely integrated systems with entirely new characteristics. Claude Levi-Strauss, The View from Afar
Contents
List of figures, tables, and maps Preface Acknowledgments 1 Island networks and graphs Graph theoretic models Geographical, linguistic, and anthropological terms
page ix xv xix 1 3 17
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Figure 2.1. The 11 graphs with four nodes.
Figure 2.2. A graph to illustrate adjacency.
V. We also write G = (V, E). We say G has order p and s/ze g. Each pair e = {«, t/} of nodes in E is an edge1 of G, and e is said to ;om u and u We also write e = uv and say that u and ^ are adjacent nodes. Adjacent nodes are said to be neighbors. Node u and edge e are incident with each other, as are v and e. If two distinct (different) edges are incident with a common node, then they are adjacent edges. A graph with p nodes and q edges is called a (p, q) graph. The (1,0) graph, consisting of just one node, is called trivial, mainly in order to exclude it by specifying that a graph be nontriviaL A graph is usually represented by a diagram that is referred to as the graph. In the graph G of Fig. 2.2, the nodes u and v are adjacent, but u and w are not; edges a and b art adjacent, but a and c art not. Although 1 Synonyms of "node and edge" are "vertex and edge," "node and branch," and "point and line."
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Island networks
Figure 2.3. A graph, a subgraph, and a spanning subgraph.
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Figure 2.4. Two labeled graphs. the edges b and c intersect in the diagram, their intersection is not a node of the graph. A subgraph of G is a graph having all of its nodes and edges in G. It is a spanning subgraph if it contains all of the nodes of G. In Fig. 2.3, G± and G2 are subgraphs of G; G2 is a spanning subgraph of G, but Gr is not. A labeling of a graph G is an assignment of labels 1 to p, or sometimes vx to fp, to its nodes. The degree of a node vt in a graph G, denoted