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Kinmaking, progeneration, and ethnography.

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  • 1Philosophy, School of Humanities, University of Western Australia, Crawley, 6009, WA, Australia.

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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Kinship is often assumed to be based on reproduction. This study challenges constructivist views in anthropology, arguing that ethnographic evidence actually supports a progenerative understanding of kinmaking.

Keywords:
Biology and kinshipConstructivism about kinshipExtensionism and kin terminologiesKinship and kinmakingPerformativism about kinshipPhilosophy of anthropology

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Area of Science:

  • Evolutionary Biology
  • Cultural Anthropology
  • Philosophy of Science

Background:

  • The concept of kin is widely assumed to be progenerative, meaning it is directly or indirectly linked to reproduction.
  • Contemporary cultural anthropology often presents constructivist or performativist views of kinship, rejecting progenerative explanations.
  • Cross-cultural diversity in kinmaking practices is frequently cited to critique progenerative models.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To critically examine the use of cross-cultural diversity in kinmaking to challenge progenerative views of kinship.
  • To analyze the assumptions underlying the transition from ethnographic data to conclusions about kinship and progeneration.
  • To re-evaluate the relationship between ethnographic evidence and theories of kinship and reproduction.

Main Methods:

  • Critical analysis of existing anthropological literature and ethnographic data.
  • Examination of the inferential links between observed kinmaking practices and theoretical models of kinship.
  • Comparative review of diverse ethnographic accounts of kinship and reproduction.

Main Results:

  • Key assumptions in using cross-cultural diversity to critique progenerative kinship models are challenged.
  • The ethnographic record, upon closer inspection, does not necessarily undermine progenerative views.
  • Inferences drawn from ethnographic data often oversimplify or misrepresent the relationship between kinmaking and reproduction.

Conclusions:

  • The study argues that ethnographic evidence, when carefully scrutinized, supports progenerative theories of kinmaking.
  • Constructivist and performativist critiques of progenerative kinship models may rely on flawed interpretations of diversity.
  • A more nuanced understanding of ethnographic data reinforces the biological basis of kinship.