Changing the subject - About cousin marriage, among other things

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Abstract

The original sin of anthropology was to divide the world into civilized and savage. The social systems of all those other peoples supposedly rested upon a foundation of blood relationships. Anthropologists therefore became at once the experts on the primitive and on kinship. In the 1970s Western kinship systems began to undergo radical change. Simultaneously, the old orthodoxies about kinship crumbled in anthropology. Young ethnographers generally lost interest in the topic. Kinship systems have nevertheless not gone away, out there in the world. But to understand them we must first abandon the opposition between the modern and the traditional, the West and the Rest. © 2008 Royal Anthropological Institute.

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APA

Kuper, A. (2008). Changing the subject - About cousin marriage, among other things. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, 14(4), 717–735. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9655.2008.00527.x

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