Kinship and Culture
Cover -- Half Title -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Preface -- Contents -- Indroduction -- 1: A Hypothesis on Kinship and Culture -- Part I: Theoretical Explorations -- 2: Notes on the Hsu Hypotheses -- 3: Dyad Dominance and Household Maintenance -- Part II: Ethnographic Explorations -- 4: The Suku of the Congo: An Ethnographic Test of Hsu's Hypotheses -- 5: Role Dilemmas and Father-Son Dominance in Middle Eastern Kinship Systems -- 6: Some Implications of Dominant Kinship Relationships in Fiji and Rotuma -- 7: Components of Relationships in the Family: A Mexican Village 114 -- 8: Father-Son Dominance: Tikopia and China 152 -- 9: Social Relationships in Two Australian Aboriginal Societies of Arnhem Land: Gunwinggu and "Murngin -- 10: Elders and Youngers in the Nzakara Kingdom -- 11: Hsu and the External System -- 12: Some Questions About the Hsu Hypothesis As Seen Through Japanese Data -- Part III: Methodological Explorations -- 13: Sex-Role Identity and Dominant Kinship Relationships -- 14: An Examination of Hsu's "Brother-Brother" Postulate in Four East African Societies -- Part IV: Developmental Explorations -- 15: Bantu Brotherhood: Symmetry, Socialization, and Ultimate Choice in Two Bantu Cultures -- 16: Handsome Lake and the Decline of the Iroquois Matriarchate -- 17: Ambivalence, Social Structure, and Dominant Kinship Relationships: A Hypothesis -- 18: Kinship and the Associational Aspect of Social Structure -- 19: Eros, Affec, and Pao -- Conclusion -- 20: Kinship, Society, and Culture -- Bibliography -- Index