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41 pages 1 hour read

E.E. Evans-Pritchard

The Nuer: A Description of the Modes of Livelihood and Political Institutions of a Nilotic People

E.E. Evans-PritchardNonfiction | Book | Adult | Published in 1940

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Important Quotes

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“It will be seen that the Nuer political system is consistent with their oecology.”


(Introduction, Page 4)

Here Evans-Pritchard provides a succinct statement of one of his main points: that the forms and structures of Nuer culture align with the ecological features of their surroundings. Since the restrictions of their environment necessitate a lifestyle of transhumance and cattle husbandry, along with a subsistence level of horticulture, ecological considerations push toward social systems which are relatively egalitarian.

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“Indeed, the Nuer have no government, and their state might be described as an ordered anarchy.”


(Introduction, Pages 5-6)

Taken out of context, this quote could lead to misunderstandings about Nuer culture, as “anarchy” tends to invite suppositions of chaos and lawlessness in many reader’s minds. Evans-Pritchard’s book makes it clear, however, that the Nuer have a highly complex political system which maintains a stable social equilibrium across a group numbering in the hundreds of thousands; it is merely anarchic in the sense that it has no centralized authority.

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“The inquiry is directed to two ends: to describe the life of the Nuer, and to lay bare some of the principles of their social structure.”


(Introduction, Page 7)

Here Evans-Pritchard simply states the goals of the book. The two halves of this sentence roughly correspond to the structure of the book’s main chapters: Chapters 1-3 deal with cultural observations of the Nuer’s life and livelihood, and Chapters 4-6 with the social structures evidence in their tribal, lineage, and age-set systems.

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