Kinship, Law and the Unexpected
Marilyn Strathern takes up an issue at the heart of studies of society--anthropologists using relationships to uncover relationships. The role of relations in western (Euro-American) knowledge practices, from the scientific revolution onwards, raises a question about the extent to which Euro-American kinship is the kinship of a knowledge-based society. This argument takes the reader through current issues in biotechnology, new family formations and legal interventions, as well as intellectual property debates, to matters of personhood and ownership afforded by material from Melanesia and elsewhere.
- Casts kinship in an entirely new light
- Has interdisciplinary appeal
- Demonstrates what it argues - works by example - uses materials that asks questions - several accessible case studies interesting in their own right
Reviews & endorsements
'The book is to be recommended to anyone with an interest in kinship, law, biotechnology and general anthropological theory. At the heart of Kinship, law and the unexpected is the enduring anthropological topic of the relation. Indeed the second half of the book frequently implies the importance of relationality in by now well-established anthropological fashion. Only the first half suggests that emphasis on relations may be a consequence of certain knowledge practices. There is perhaps a certain contradiction here, tension at least. But then that is an extremely fruitful tension as Strathern demonstrates with wonderful effect.' 2008 European Association of Social Anthropologists
'Strathern's work has been devoted to the creative redeployment of the discipline's 'conventions' and aesthetic 'constraints', including such contrasts as nature and culture, gifts and commodities, and 'Melanesian' and 'Euro-American' forms of knowledge. At a time when it is fashionable to collapse these dichotomies, the exercise has demanded a considerable degree of analytical care and control on her part. It is Strathern's extraordinary capacity to control these contrasts that has enabled her to show how an anthropological analysis could flow radically differently within its own aesthetic constraints.' Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute
Product details
October 2005Hardback
9780521849920
240 pages
237 × 155 × 19 mm
0.53kg
Available
Table of Contents
- Preface
- Part I. Divided Origins: Introduction: divided origins
- 1. Relatives are always a surprise: biotechnology in an age of individualism
- 2. Embedded science
- 3. Emergent properties
- Part II. The Arithmetic of Ownership: Introduction: the arithmetic of ownership
- 4. The patent and the Malanggan
- 5. Losing (out on) intellectual resources
- 6. Divided origins and the arithmetic of ownership
- Notes
- References
- Author index
- Subject index.