Reconnecting State and Kinship / / ed. by Tatjana Thelen, Erdmute Alber.

Within the social sciences, kinship and statehood are often seen as two distinct modes of social organization, sometimes conceived of as following each other in a temporal line and sometimes as operating on different scales. Kinship is traditionally associated with small-scale communities in statele...

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Superior document:Title is part of eBook package: De Gruyter University of Pennsylvania Press Complete eBook-Package 2018
MitwirkendeR:
HerausgeberIn:
Place / Publishing House:Philadelphia : : University of Pennsylvania Press, , [2017]
©2018
Year of Publication:2017
Language:English
Online Access:
Physical Description:1 online resource (256 p.)
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Description
Other title:Frontmatter --
Contents --
Reconnecting State and Kinship: Temporalities, Scales, Classifications --
Part I. Traveling Concepts Temporalities, Scales, and the Making of Political Order --
Chapter 1. Corruption as Political Incest --
Chapter 2. Kinship Weaponized --
Chapter 3. Inside and Outside the Language of Kinship --
Chapter 4. Appropriate Kinship, Legitimate Nationhood --
Chapter 5. From Familial to Familiar --
Part II. Classifying Kinship and the Making of Citizens --
Chapter 6. The Politics of “See-Through” Kinship --
Chapter 7. Undoing Kinship --
Chapter 8. Producing “Good” Families and Citizens in Danish Child Care Institutions --
Chapter 9. After Citizenship --
Contributors --
Index --
Acknowledgments
Summary:Within the social sciences, kinship and statehood are often seen as two distinct modes of social organization, sometimes conceived of as following each other in a temporal line and sometimes as operating on different scales. Kinship is traditionally associated with small-scale communities in stateless societies. The state, meanwhile, is viewed as a development away from kinship as political order toward rational, impersonal, and functional forms of rule. In recent decades, theoretical and empirical scholarship has challenged these notions, but the underlying presumption of a deep-rooted opposition between kinship and the (modern) state has remained surprisingly stable.That this binary is so deeply engrained in Western self-understanding and knowledge production poses a considerable challenge to decoding their coproduction. Reconnecting State and Kinship seeks to trace the historical shifts and boundary work implied in the ongoing reproduction of these supposedly discrete or even opposing units of analysis. Contributors ask whether concepts associated with one sphere —including corruption, patronage, lineage, and incest—surface in the other. Policies and interventions modeled upon the assumed polarity can have lasting consequences for mechanisms of marginalization and exclusion, including decisions about life and death.Reconnecting State and Kinship not only explores the boundary-related and classificatory practices that reinforce the kinship/statehood binary but also tracks the traveling of these concepts and their underlying norms through time and space ultimately demonstrating the ways that kinship and "the state" are intertwined.Contributors: Erdmute Alber, Apostolos Andrikopoulos, Helle Bundgaard, Jeanette Edwards, Karen Fog Olwig, Victoria Goddard, Michael Herzfeld, Eirini Papadaki, Frances Pine, Ivan Rajković, Tatjana Thelen, Thomas Zitelmann.
Format:Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.
ISBN:9780812294415
9783110606638
DOI:10.9783/9780812294415
Access:restricted access
Hierarchical level:Monograph
Statement of Responsibility: ed. by Tatjana Thelen, Erdmute Alber.