Distant worlds, ancient worlds
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Distant worlds, ancient worlds
(A history of the family, v. 1)
Belknap Press of Harvard Univ. Press, 1996
- Other Title
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Histoire de la famille
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Note
"First published in France as "Histoire de la famille""--t.p. verso
"This translation first published in 1996 by Polity Press in association with Blackwell Publishers"--t.p. verso
Includes bibliographical references (p. [655]-691) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
As old as the prehistoric bones jumbled in caves, as new as the latest union consummated in a test tube, the family in one form or another is at the heart of every society. Our most common institution, it is also the source of some of the world's most compelling and persistent questions, touching the very quick of history, anthropology, psychology, and sociology. "A History of the Family" is the first work to address all these aspects of the family over time and across the earth--to search out what the family means in its most particular and universal senses.This monumental work in two volumes brings together experts from every discipline to show what the study of each epoch has to tell us about the family. Why is the family universal and yet so different in its various cultural manifestations? What notions of kinship regulate it, and how do these develop and change? Francoise Zonabend's anthropological perspective on these questions, leading off Volume I, surveys familial terms and arrangements from familiar patrilinear models to matrilinear societies in Sumatra and Ghana to polyandry among the Nayar and the Toda of India. The following essays, which move from prehistory to antiquity to the middle ages, trace the evolution of the family from primate behavior to codified practices--in Sumer and Babylon and ancient Rome, in feudal Europe and medieval Byzantium, in China and Japan and Arab Islam--and relate these developments to religious, economic, and governmental concerns from land ownership to dynastic control and the maintenance of public order.
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