En
English

Blood And Kinship: Matter For Metaphor From Ancient Rome To The Present Hardcover

Recommend
0 %
Authors Estimates
0
1
0
2
0
3
0
4
0
5
Sort by
Rating
Date
Specifications
Book Description
Blood awakens associations with ancient ideas. But we know very little about the historical representations of blood in Western cultures. The contributors attempt to follow the use of blood in mapping family and kinship relations in European culture from the ancient world to the present. The project is "reflexive" in that it takes as its point of departure the questions that anthropologists are now asking about how different societies think about the substances that connect people, that are understood to produce either "kinship" - where that is still considered to be a relevant category - or "relatedness." What has been the development of European understandings of how kinship and blood are connected? "Blood" has come and gone in European culture, just as kinship has constantly been reconfigured. Both have been moving, sometimes in parallel and sometimes in divergent directions. And both have taken on quite different meanings over time.
ISBN-13
9780857457493
Language
English
Publisher
Berghahn Books
Publication Date
13 February 2013
Number of Pages
372
Editor 1
Christopher H. Johnson
Editor 2
Bernhard Jussen
Editorial Review
This is an excellent book, a sophisticated collection of scholarship that raises questions important not only to historians but also to anthropologists and other social scientists. I loved reading it - * Jared Poley, Georgia State University
Editor 3
David Warren Sabean