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The Ethics of Kinship : Ethnographic Inquiries

Faubion, JamesBabula, Carolyn(Contributions by)Bargach, Jamila(Contributions by)Borneman, John(Contributions by)Carpenter, Stanford(Contributions by)Deckha, Nityanand(Contributions by)Faubion, James D.(Contributions by)George, Laurel(Contributions by)Karim, Lamia(Contributions by)Ossman, Susan(Contributions by)
Part of the Alterations series
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What need is there for kinship? What good is it anyway? The questions are as old as anthropology itself, but few answers have been persuasive.

Kinship systems can contribute to our enslavement, but more often, they permit, channel and facilitate our relations with others and our further fashioning of ourselves - as kin, but also as subjects of other kinds.

When they do, they are among the matrices of our lives as ethical beings.

Each contributor to this innovative book treats his or her own alterity as the touchstone of the exploration of an ethnographically and historically specific ethics of kinship.

Together, the chapters reveal the irreducible complexity of the entanglement of the subject of kinship with the subject of nation, class, ethnicity, gender and desire.

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Product Details
0742509559 / 9780742509559
Hardback
306.83
13/12/2001
United States
English
288p.
postgraduate /research & professional /undergraduate Learn More