Comparative Kinship Systems: A Method of Analysis
β Scribed by Bernard Farber
- Publisher
- John Wiley & Sons
- Year
- 1968
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 142
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
"The subject of incest has a strange fascination for man. . . . Men seem never to tire of it but continue to find it ever fresh and absorbing. Incest must indeed be reckoned as one of man's major interests in life."
This book relates prohibitions of incestuous marriage to the organization of kinship groups. It presents an analysis of ten kinship systems in terms of relatives who are forbidden to marry one another. Insofar as kinship relationships constitute systems, the norms governing incestuous marriage should be consistent with those regulating inheritance, marriage preferences, control over nuclear family relationships, and divorce. The analysis is concerned ultimately with the association between kinship systems and social stratification.
The book is intended as a prologomena to a more extensive study of kinship. As such, it does not pursue many of the ideas and questions regarding social structure that grow out of the analysis. Because the larger study may take several years to complete, I have decided to prepare this monograph now in case other social scientists want to apply the method of analysis described in it.
β¦ Table of Contents
Analysis of kinship systems. Alliance of integration ; Variations in social differentiation and integration : a speculation ; Intimate-kin groups ; Method ; Presentation of results of analysis of kinship systems --
American kinship systems. The data ; Patterns of kinship implicit in laws regarding incestuous marriage ; Discussion --
Ecclesiastical and soviet kinship systems. Ecclesiastical kinship system ; Soviet kinship system ; Discussion --
Patrilineal systems. The Nyakyusa kinship system ; Marri Baluch kinship system ; Discussion --
Matrilineal systems. Ashanti kinship system ; Guadalcanal kinship system ; Discussion --
Prescriptive marriage systems. Chin kinship system ; The Mapuche kinship system ; Discussion --
Comparison of kinship systems. Kin group control over marriage ; Inheritance patterns and first-cousin marriage ; Authority and the unity of the sibling group ; Residence after marriage ; a final note.
β¦ Subjects
Sociology; Anthropology; Social Anthropology; Kinship; Methodology; Marriage; Alliance; Incest
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