Sociology
Sociology
Sociology
Semester ____ 4
Paper Number HSOCR4091T
Paper Title Sociology of Kinship
No. of Credits 6
Theory/Composite Theory
No. of periods assigned Th: 5 +1
Pr:
Name of Faculty member(s)
1 INSTRUCTOR 1 TUTOR
Course description/objective
This course combines perspective from anthropology and sociology to
understand the institutions of Kinship, marriage, and family.
• The student will be familiarized with the theoretical
approaches to the anthropological study of Kinship including
descent, alliance, Marxist, Cultural and feminist. The course
looks at the trajectories and new directions in kinship studies
• The student will encounter typologies of marriage and its
social significance, functionalist and feminist approaches to
marriage.
• Students will learn how discourses, both modern and pre-
modern shape the ‘normal’ family and feminist critiques of
the same.
• Students will also be introduced to classical sociological
approaches to religion.
• The course aims to equip students to think sociologically and
critically about the aforementioned social institutions
• The course is aimed to check ethno-centrism among students
and to foster respect, appreciation and a whole hearted
defense of cultural differences.
Syllabus
Outline: Introduction:
• Relatedness
• Kinship and Gender
• Re-imagining Families
• New Reproductive Technologies
Texts
Further Readings:
Fortes, M., 1970, Time and Social Structure and Other Essays,
University of London: The Athlone Press, Chapter 3, Pp. 67-95
Jackson, Stevi and Sue Scott (eds). 2002. ‘Part Three: Marriage and
Intimate Relationships’, Gender: A Sociological Reader. London:
Routledge. Pp- 203-259
Further Readings
Shah, A.M., 1998, ‘Changes in the Indian Family: An Examination of
Some Assumptions’, in The Family in India: Critical Essays, New
Delhi: Orient Longman, Pp.52-63
Freeman, J. D., 1958, ‘The Family Systems of the Iban of Borneo’, in
J. Goody (ed.), The Developmental Cycle in Domestic Groups,
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, Pp. 15-52
3. Re-casting Kinship
Carsten, Janet, 1995, ‘The Substance of Kinship and the Heat of the
Hearth: Feeding, Personhood, and Relatedness among Malays in
Pulau Langkawi’ American Ethnologist, 22 (2): 223-24.1
Re-imagining Families
Evaluation CIA: 20
End-Sem: 80
The end semester examination will have the following paper structure
i) Long Answer type questions : 20 x 2 = 40 marks (out of 4 )
ii) Short answer type questions : 10 x 4 = 40 (out of 8)