Kinship and Class in the West Indies
Is a family system that permits freedom to enter, dissolve, and re-enter sexual unions, that tolerates high illegitimacy rates, and allows a large proportion of households to be headed by women, viable, natural and healthy? This is an appropriate question to ask of many modern industrial societies in the 1980s. Yet a system with just those factors has been in place in the West Indies for 150 years. In this book, Raymond T. Smith explores the extensive family and kinship ties of West Indians in Jamaica and Guyana, and in so doing dispels many of the myths that exist about West Indian family life.
Product details
November 1990Paperback
9780521396493
220 pages
226 × 152 × 13 mm
0.324kg
Available
Table of Contents
- 1. Introduction: assumptions, procedures, methods
- 2. Kinship, culture and theory
- 3. What is kinship in the West Indies?
- 4. The structure of genealogies
- 5. Marriage in the formation of West Indian society
- 6. Modern marriage and other arrangements
- 7. Sex role differentiation
- 8. Household and family
- 9 Conclusion