Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- List of contributors
- 1 Revitalizing the Study of Kinship and Exchange with Network Approaches
- I Representing Kinship Dynamics, Material Flow, and Economic Cooperation
- II Individual Embeddedness and the Larger Structure of Kinship and Exchange Networks
- III Marriage, Exchange, and Alliance: Reconsidering Bridewealth and Dowry
- IV Emergence, Development, and Transformation of Kin-Based Exchange Systems
- 12 Applications of the Minimum Spanning Tree Problem to Network Analysis
- 13 Local Rules and Global Structures: Models of Exclusive Straight Sister-Exchange
- 14 The Capacity and Constraints of Kinship in the Development of the Enga Tee Ceremonial Exchange Network (Papua New Guinea Highlands)
- 15 Between War and Peace: Gift Exchange and Commodity Barter in the Central and Fringe Highlands of Papua New Guinea
- Index
13 - Local Rules and Global Structures: Models of Exclusive Straight Sister-Exchange
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 November 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- List of contributors
- 1 Revitalizing the Study of Kinship and Exchange with Network Approaches
- I Representing Kinship Dynamics, Material Flow, and Economic Cooperation
- II Individual Embeddedness and the Larger Structure of Kinship and Exchange Networks
- III Marriage, Exchange, and Alliance: Reconsidering Bridewealth and Dowry
- IV Emergence, Development, and Transformation of Kin-Based Exchange Systems
- 12 Applications of the Minimum Spanning Tree Problem to Network Analysis
- 13 Local Rules and Global Structures: Models of Exclusive Straight Sister-Exchange
- 14 The Capacity and Constraints of Kinship in the Development of the Enga Tee Ceremonial Exchange Network (Papua New Guinea Highlands)
- 15 Between War and Peace: Gift Exchange and Commodity Barter in the Central and Fringe Highlands of Papua New Guinea
- Index
Summary
INTRODUCTION
More than a decade has elapsed since the publication of Franchise Héritier's L'excercise de la parenté (1981), an important and original contribution to the theory of kinship. Drawing on her extraordinarily rich field data from the Samo of Upper Volta, Héritier attempted to clarify certain propositions first put forward by Claude Lévi-Strauss in his 1965 Huxley Memorial Lecture, “The Future of Kinship Studies” (1966). These propositions bear upon the so-called Crow-Omaha or semi-complex systems of alliance, conceived of as a distinctive category intermediate with respect to the “elementary” and “complex” structures. Lévi-Strauss claimed that understanding how such semi-complex systems regulate alliances and restrict the choice of marriage partners is crucial if we are ever to develop a truly general theory of kinship, one which is applicable to the classic elementary structures and also to the complex ones exemplified by modern societies. The many questions raised by Lévi-Strauss's speculations provoked fundamental debate. His ideas also stimulated many new field studies, including Héritier's research.
The main results of Héritier's study are well known. Briefly, the patrilineal Samo formulate an elaborate system of marriage prohibitions that combine the classic unilineal proscriptions central to Lévi-Strauss's definition of the Crow- Omaha category with cognatic injunctions spanning three generations, and these in turn are combined with a further set of restrictions on the replication of previous alliances.
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- Information
- Kinship, Networks, and Exchange , pp. 261 - 276Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1998