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      Kinship, Population and Social Reproduction in the ‘New Indonesia’
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      Kinship, Population and Social Reproduction in the ‘New Indonesia’

      DOI link for Kinship, Population and Social Reproduction in the ‘New Indonesia’

      Kinship, Population and Social Reproduction in the ‘New Indonesia’ book

      A Study of Nuaulu Cultural Resilience

      Kinship, Population and Social Reproduction in the ‘New Indonesia’

      DOI link for Kinship, Population and Social Reproduction in the ‘New Indonesia’

      Kinship, Population and Social Reproduction in the ‘New Indonesia’ book

      A Study of Nuaulu Cultural Resilience
      ByRoy Ellen
      Edition 1st Edition
      First Published 2018
      eBook Published 23 May 2018
      Pub. Location London
      Imprint Routledge
      DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781351027144
      Pages 236
      eBook ISBN 9781351027144
      Subjects Area Studies, Social Sciences
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      Ellen, R. (2018). Kinship, Population and Social Reproduction in the ‘New Indonesia’: A Study of Nuaulu Cultural Resilience (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781351027144

      ABSTRACT

      Nuaulu people on the Indonesian island of Seram have displayed remarkable linguistic and cultural resilience over a period of 50 years. In 1970 their language and traditional culture was widely considered ‘endangered.’ Despite this, Nuaulu have not only maintained their animist identity and shown a robust ability to reproduce 'traditional' ritual performances, but have exhibited both population growth and increasing assertiveness in the projection of their interests through the politics of the ‘New Indonesia’.

      This book examines how kinship organization and marriage patterns have responded to some of these challenges, and suggests that the retention of core institutions of descent and exchange are the consequence of population growth, which in turn has enabled ritual reproduction, and thereby effectively maintained a distinct identity in relation to the surrounding majority culture. Low conversion rates to other religions, and the political consequences of Indonesian ‘reformasi’, have also contributed to a situation in which, despite changes in the material basis of their lives, Nuaulu have projected a strong independent identity and organisation. In terms of debates around kinship in eastern Indonesia, this book argues that older notions of prescriptive social structure are fundamentally flawed. Kinship institutions are real enough, but the distinction between genealogical and classificatory relations is often unimportant; all that matters in the end is that the arrangements entered into between clans and houses permit both biological and social reproduction, and that the latter ultimately serves the former.

      An important contribution to the study of the peoples of Eastern Indonesia, it highlights a 'good news story' about the successful retention of a traditional way of life in an area that has had a troubled recent history. It will be of interest to academics in various fields of anthropology, in particular the study of kinship and Southeast Asian societies.

      TABLE OF CONTENTS

      chapter 1|13 pages

      Introduction

      chapter 2|22 pages

      Clans, history and the emergence of the Nuaulu ethnos

      chapter 3|21 pages

      Descent, duality and gender

      chapter 4|22 pages

      Houses, networks and the practices of kinship

      chapter 5|23 pages

      Language and the social cognition of relationality

      chapter 6|30 pages

      Marriage 1

      Exchange, process and transaction

      chapter 7|26 pages

      Marriage 2

      Matrilaterality, bilaterality and alliance

      chapter 8|15 pages

      Rules, contravention and enforcement

      chapter 9|29 pages

      Demography, change and social reproduction

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