ABSTRACT

The study of family and inheritance systems is a traditionally anthropological one. Dr Davis has examined a South Italian town with records from 1814 and concludes that the present 'typical' European system is of recent adoption, a response to the gradual and peculiar integration of Pisticci into a nation-state and national economy. The account of landholding distinguishes carefully between legal rights and informal cessions of land, and agriculture is put into the context of other economic activities. Dr Davis emphasises the structural importance of kin, family and neighbourhood relationships as bases for the creation of more ephemeral ties of friendship, clientage and network.

chapter 1|21 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|20 pages

Marriage

chapter 3|17 pages

Families, Kinship and Neighbourhood: I

chapter 4|14 pages

Families, Kinship and Neighbourhood: II

chapter 6|15 pages

Work

chapter 7|12 pages

Fragmentation at Caporotondo

chapter 8|27 pages

Rights and Resources

chapter 9|11 pages

Some Effects of Modernization Programmes

chapter 10|6 pages

Land Tenure, Kinship and Social Structure