Family, Kinship and Marriage in IndiaPatricia Uberoi Oxford in India Readings in Sociology and Social Anthropology have been carefully planned to suit the needs of the general reader, students, teachers, as well as scholars from other disciplines. Problems have been posed in general theoretical terms, but Indian ethnography has been used as far as possible to illustrate them. Each volume is devoted to a core area in sociology and social anthropology and brings within one cover important writings, some of which are very difficult to find. In this way it serves the useful purpose of short-circuiting the vast body of writing in a discipline, and at the same time presenting the current state of art in it. Family, Kinship and Marriage in India attempts to capture the great variety of family types and kinship practices that are to be found in the South Asia region, and the several theoretical formulations which posit an underlying unity in this variety. The readings have been organized into four sections: Regional Varieties, North and South, Descent Groups and the Kindred; Marriage, Alliance and Affinal Transactions; and Family, Household and Social Change. Some sophisticated new analyses of family and kinship have not made a general impact as yet. These have been presented in as accessible a form as possible in this volume. The readings also try to integrate a concern for gender issues into the study of Indian family and kinship. They offer the best of recent work as well as some celebrated classical writings. The volume editor has a long introduction followed by long section introductions explaining the rationale behind her selections in each section. She also intervenes to explain the text when she feels it to be necessary in the form ofeditorial notes. Each section introduction ends with an annotated bibliography of additional readings and there is an exhaustive bibliography at the end of the book. This volume includes an extremely useful glossary of technical terms in kinship studies. |
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Page 187
Patricia Uberoi. Relatives and the Kindred in the Punjabi Kinship System PAUL HERSHMAN The general expression in Punjabi for ' relatives ' is either sāk or rishtedār . If a Punjabi is asked tuhāḍa sāk kauṇ kauṇ hai ? ( ' who are your ...
Patricia Uberoi. Relatives and the Kindred in the Punjabi Kinship System PAUL HERSHMAN The general expression in Punjabi for ' relatives ' is either sāk or rishtedār . If a Punjabi is asked tuhāḍa sāk kauṇ kauṇ hai ? ( ' who are your ...
Page 188
... Punjabi phrases for classificatory or distant kinsmen . The most common of these phrases in referring to a distant kinsman is bhaj nath ke , which literally means ' having run away ' , i.e. the relationship has gone distant . The ...
... Punjabi phrases for classificatory or distant kinsmen . The most common of these phrases in referring to a distant kinsman is bhaj nath ke , which literally means ' having run away ' , i.e. the relationship has gone distant . The ...
Page 198
Patricia Uberoi. Masks and Faces : An Essay on Punjabi Kinship VEENA DAS The character of Punjabi kinship is best described as a dialectic between the rules deriving from nature and the rules deriving from culture.1 In the Punjabi theory ...
Patricia Uberoi. Masks and Faces : An Essay on Punjabi Kinship VEENA DAS The character of Punjabi kinship is best described as a dialectic between the rules deriving from nature and the rules deriving from culture.1 In the Punjabi theory ...
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Common terms and phrases
affinal agnates alliance anthropologists behaviour Brahmans bride bridegroom price bridewealth cent ceremony child clan common context cousin marriage cousins cross-cousin cross-cousin marriage cultural descent groups Dhund dowry Dravidian kinship Dumont economic Ego's exogamy fact father father's sister's genealogical gifts girl gotra groom Gujarat Hindu household hypergamy important Indian family Indian kinship individual Indo-Aryan institutions Jaunsar Bawar joint family Karimpur Khasi kinship and marriage kinship studies kinship system kinship terminology kinsmen land Lévi-Strauss lineage group live low caste male marriage rules marry matrilateral mother mother's brother Nayar north India nuclear families Pandits parents Patidars patrilineal pattern person polyandry polygynandry polygyny Punjabi Radhvanaj Rajput Rathods reference region relations relationship relatives riage ritual role sakke sambandham segment sexual siblings sister sister's husband social society South spouses status structure sub-caste theory tion traditional urban village wife wife-givers wife-takers wife's wives woman women