ABSTRACT

First published in 1950 and this edition in 1987, this book is one of the most wide-ranging and respected surveys on kinship and marriage in African social life. In his introduction, Radcliff-Brown provides a masterly analysis of the main features of African kinship systems and the theoretical problems arising from the study of them. The contributions range from examinations of kinship systems among the Swazi, the Tswana, the Zulu, the Nuer, and the Ashanti, to double descent among the Yakö and dual descent in the Nuba groups of the Sudan. The contributors themselves are still viewed as giants in their field: Evans-Pritchard, Meyer Fortes, Max Gluckman, Hilda Kuper, Naderl, A. I. Richards, Schapera and Monica Wilson.

chapter 1|85 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|25 pages

Kinship Among the Swazi

chapter 3|29 pages

Nyakyusa Kinship

chapter 8|48 pages

Double Descent Among the Yakö

chapter 9|27 pages

Dual Descent in the Nuba Hills