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Status and Sacredness
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"One of the very best books by a sociologist published in recent years. Profound and significant, both for scholars and educated lay people. A must read for all interested in the subject and its numerous implications."--Amitai Etzioni, author of The Spirit of Community
"A distinguished and superior piece of sociological analysis which is bound to elicit enthusiastic responses by readers in sociology but also in other social science domains as well as in schools of theology. I believe much of what he has to say is bound to influence scholars who will come after him."--Lewis A. Coser, SUNY Stony Brook and Boston College
"Milner's analysis of Indian society has the comprehensiveness and depth of a masterwork. The book bears favorable comparison with Louis Dumont's Homo Hierarchicus, the modern classic on this topic. It is likewise an important work of general theory, examining India as a crucial case where the principles of the status order may be seen in their most extreme form, and laying bare the nature of struggle over the appropriation of status
resources."--Randall Collins, University of California, Riverside
"This elegant and imaginative construction of a general theory of status via a detailed study of the caste system displays sustained argumentation of a high order. It wouldn't be extravagant to compare it with Durkheim's theory of the religious life. The difference is that Milner takes the most complex, instead of the most elementary, case."--David Lockwood, University of Essex
"Probably destined to become a major work in the sociology of religion....Tightly reasoned and schematic, this book will likely interest a broad array of scholars concerned with the relation of religion to social inequality. Certainly it is the most ambitious new interpretation of caste to appear since the competing theories of Louis Dumont and McKim Marriott, which have dominated the scholarly discussion about Hindu society for the past twenty-five years.
Recommended for all academic libraries."--Religious Studies Review
"One of the very best books by a sociologist published in recent years. Profound and significant, both for scholars and educated lay people. A must read for all interested in the subject and its numerous implications."--Amitai Etzioni, author of The Spirit of Community
"A distinguished and superior piece of sociological analysis which is bound to elicit enthusiastic responses by readers in sociology but also in other social science domains as well as in schools of theology. I believe much of what he has to say is bound to influence scholars who will come after him."--Lewis A. Coser, SUNY Stony Brook and Boston College
"Milner's analysis of Indian society has the comprehensiveness and depth of a masterwork. The book bears favorable comparison with Louis Dumont's Homo Hierarchicus, the modern classic on this topic. It is likewise an important work of general theory, examining India as a crucial case where the principles of the status order may be seen in their most extreme form, and laying bare the nature of struggle over the appropriation of status
resources."--Randall Collins, University of California, Riverside
"This elegant and imaginative construction of a general theory of status via a detailed study of the caste system displays sustained argumentation of a high order. It wouldn't be extravagant to compare it with Durkheim's theory of the religious life. The difference is that Milner takes the most complex, instead of the most elementary, case."--David Lockwood, University of Essex
"Probably destined to become a major work in the sociology of religion....Tightly reasoned and schematic, this book will likely interest a broad array of scholars concerned with the relation of religion to social inequality. Certainly it is the most ambitious new interpretation of caste to appear since the competing theories of Louis Dumont and McKim Marriott, which have dominated the scholarly discussion about Hindu society for the past twenty-five years.
Recommended for all academic libraries."--Religious Studies Review
"

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