The intent of this collection of original essays is to revitalize the study of kinship and exchange in a social network perspective. The collection combines studies of empirical systems of marriage and descent with investigations of the flow of material resources. This book marks the emergence of a new era in the study of kinship and exchange using a productive combination of ethnographic substance with formal methods, one which leaves behind older structural-functionalist and culturalist assumptions.
Kinship, Networks and Exchange offers a stocktaking and then extension of recent ideas in kinship and exchange processes from the overall perspective of social networks. The editors have done a superb job of putting together an integrated suite of empirical and theoretical papers that illustrate a broad cross-section of the current state of anthropological practice in the three thematic areas indicated in the title. The series of problem-oriented case studies successfully demonstrates how traditional ethnographic approaches can be combined productively with a variety of formal (algebraic, game-theoretic, dada-reduction) methods. The methodologies explored here are relatively novel, and all are illustrated with highly believable empirical applications to either new or classic ethnographic data sets. Economic and political anthropologists, and economists and sociologies with interdisciplinary interests in social structure, will find many of these papers of great value, as will various area specialists (Africa, Andes, Polynesia, Java). -- Malcolm Dow, Northwestern University
The essays collected in this outstanding volume uniformly interweave rich contextual data with beautifully crafted formal network methods to yield new and often powerful insights into kinship systems, exchange structures, and, more generally, social processes of fundamental importance to human societies. -- Peter S. Bearman, Columbia University
Collectively, the articles in this volume constitute a radical rethinking of traditional approaches in the study of kinship, exchange, and social structure. The advances come from a careful blending of theory and method. New conceptualizations have led the authors top refine their theories. It is an impressive accomplisyhment that will be of interest to any social scientist working on the formal analysis of institutional processes. -- John Mohr, University of California at Berkeley