The Downfall of Kinship

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The Downfall of Kinship(Question 2)

In the past, kinship has been an integral part of explaining societies in the anthropological field, as it is one of the bases of social structure in most societies to varying degrees. However, with the eventual spread of what is modernly western ideals, the importance of kinship was lost and thought to be outdated for western philosophy. So, with the western ideals and the newer action of globalization, making these western ideals the norm, kinship is seen as less important for societal structure, though moderately important from a biological perspective. Nevertheless, with the rise of western society, the downfall of kinship has caused it to only seem relevant in ethnic, traditional based societies that still exist and are thought to below western societies.

Though currently thought to be insignificant, kinship is still an important, if not the most important, part of a societies structure, though it may not be the only means of forming the structure, such as economy, politics and religion. In earlier and traditional societies, kinship was an important social institution because it would set up a persons life, regulating who would help take care of individuals, what careers they would take on, who they would marry, who would protect them, and most importantly, give them their social identity (Eriksen SPLI 100). Even in the societies where kinship if not the most important social structure, where “kinship has given way to other principles of organising politics, religion, the economy and so on, but it continues to be a crucial part of people’s identity and their webs of commitments to others” (Eriksen SPLI 100-1). In these societies, kinship is important in giving individuals social ident...

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...ems to lose more of its significance due to the globalization of these ideas, its contributions still must be recognized as one of the starting forces in creating civilization.

Works Cited

Carsten, Janet. Constitutive Knowlege: Tracing Trajectories of Information in New Contexts of Relatedness. Anthropology Quarterly 80.2 (2007) 403-426

Eriksen, Thomas Hylland. Small Places, Large Issues. London: Pluto Press, 1995

Eriksen, Thomas Hylland. What is Anthropology? London: Pluto Press, 2004.

Herzfelf, Michael. Global Kinship: Anthropology and the Politics of Knowing. Anthropology Quarterly 80.2 (2007) 313-323

Howell, Singe. Changes in Moral Values About the Family: Adoption Legislation in Norway and the US. Social Analysis 50.3(2006) 146-163

Yngvesson, Barbara. Refiguring Kinship in the Space of Adoption. Anthropology Quarterly 80.2 (2007) 561-579

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