
Kinship in Neckarhausen, 1700–1870
$62.99 (C)
- Author: David Warren Sabean, University of California, Los Angeles
- Date Published: December 1997
- availability: Available
- format: Paperback
- isbn: 9780521586573
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This book analyzes shifts in the relations of families, households, and individuals in a single German village during the transition to a modern social structure and cultural order. The findings call into question the idea that the more modern society became, the less kin mattered. Rather, the opposite happened. During "modernization," close kin developed a flexible set of exchanges, passing marriage partners, godparents, political favors, work contacts, and financial guarantees back and forth. These new kinship systems were fundamental for class formation. The author also repositions women in the center of the political culture of alliances.
Read more- Microhistory - next stage beyond Carlo Ginzburg and Natalie Davis
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- Attempts to draw from social and cultural history, structure and practice, grand narrative and local stories, strategy and tactic, social system and language
Reviews & endorsements
"...a superb piece of scholarship, which speaks to the interests of specialists working in different disciplines with different geographical concentrations." Karl Wegert, Canadian Journal of History
See more reviews"This volume is without doubt the most theoretically well-informed, methodologically most sophisticated, and archivally best researched work in English on the History of community-level kinship in the European past." Anjrejs Plakans, Journal of Interdisciplinary History
"Powerful and thought-provoking, Sabean's work has once again clarified our 'thinking about past social processes.'" Journal of Social History
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×Product details
- Date Published: December 1997
- format: Paperback
- isbn: 9780521586573
- length: 658 pages
- dimensions: 229 x 152 x 34 mm
- weight: 0.87kg
- contains: 131 b/w illus. 159 tables
- availability: Available
Table of Contents
Introduction:
1. An introduction to kinship
2. Vetterleswirtschaft: rise and fall of a political discourse
3. The politics of incest and the ecology of alliance formation
Cohort I (1700–9):
4. Introduction to kinship during the early decades of the eighteenth century
5. Kinship as a factor in marriage strategy
6. Marriage and kinship practices
7. Ritual kinship
8. Naming children
Cohort II (1740–9):
9. Restructuring the system of alliance
10. Village politics at mid-century
Cohort III (1780–9):
11. Consanguinity as a principle of alliance
12. The formation of an alliance system
13. Ritual kinship and alternative alliance
14. Naming an patrilineal alliance
Cohort IV (1820–9):
15. Kinship at the beginning of the nineteenth century
16. Kinship and practice at the turn of the century
Cohort V (1860–9):
17. Kinship in the mid-nineteenth century village: an introduction
18. Networking with kin around the mid-nineteenth century
19. Matrifocal alliance
Conclusion:
20. Consanguinity in European perspective
21. Neckarhausen in European comparative perspective
22. Kinship and class formation
23. Kinship and gender.
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