Table of Contents
INTRODUCTION BY ROBERT REDFIELD
I. PRIMITIVE MAN AND HIS RELIGION
II. RATIONAL MASTERY BY MAN OF HIS SURROUNDINGS
III. LIFE, DEATH, AND DESTINY IN EARLY FAITH AND CULT
1. The Creative Acts of Religion
2. Providence in Primitive Life
3. Man’s Selective Interest in Nature
4. Death and the Reintegration of the Group
IV. THE PUBLIC AND TRIBAL CHARACTER OF PRIMITIVE CULTS
1. Society as the Substance of God
2. The Moral Efficiency of Savage Beliefs
3. Social and Individual Contributions in Primitive Religion
V. THE ART OF MAGIC AND THE POWER OF FAITH
3. Mana and the Virtue of Magic
Myth in Primitive Psychology
DEDICATION TO SIR JAMES FRAZER
III. MYTHS OF DEATH AND OF THE RECURRENT CYCLE OF LIFE
Baloma; the Spirits of the Dead
in the Trobriand Islands
IV. RETURN OF THE SPIRITS TO THEIR VILLAGES DURING THE ANNUAL FEAST, THE milamala
V. PART PLAYED BY THE SPIRITS IN MAGIC; REFERENCES TO ANCESTORS IN MAGICAL SPELLS
VII. IGNORANCE OF THE PHYSIOLOGY OF REPRODUCTION
VIII.SOME GENERAL STATEMENTS CONCERNING THE SOCIOLOGY OF BELIEF