Incest Taboos and Kinship: A Biological or a Cultural Story?

被引:8
|
作者
Read, Dwight [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Calif Los Angeles, Anthropol, Los Angeles, CA 90024 USA
关键词
culture; evolution; incest taboos; kinship; sexual aversion; Westermarck;
D O I
10.1080/00938157.2014.903151
中图分类号
Q98 [人类学];
学科分类号
030303 ;
摘要
In most, if not all, societies, incest taboos-perhaps the most universal of cultural taboos-include prohibitions on marriage between parent and child or between siblings. This universality suggests a biological origin, yet the considerable variation across societies in the full range of prohibited marriage relations implies a cultural origin. Correspondingly, theories regarding the origin of incest taboos vary from those that focus on the biological consequences (were marriage-based procreation allowed to include inbred matings) to those that focus on social consequences such as confounding social roles, especially within the family, or restricting networks of interfamily alliances, were marriages to take place between close relatives. For those focusing on the biological consequences, the sexual aversion hypothesis of the anthropologist Edvard Westermarck has played a central role through seemingly providing an empirically grounded, causal link from the phenomenal level of behavior to the ideational level of culture. Yet the matter is not so simple and requires rethinking of what we mean by kinship and how our ideas about kinship relate to the widespread occurrence of incest taboos and the extensive variability in their content.
引用
收藏
页码:150 / 175
页数:26
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Comparing and Integrating Biological and Cultural Moral Progress
    Markus Christen
    Darcia Narvaez
    Eveline Gutzwiller-Helfenfinger
    Ethical Theory and Moral Practice, 2017, 20 : 55 - 73
  • [32] Comparing and Integrating Biological and Cultural Moral Progress
    Christen, Markus
    Narvaez, Darcia
    Gutzwiller-Helfenfinger, Eveline
    ETHICAL THEORY AND MORAL PRACTICE, 2017, 20 (01) : 55 - 73
  • [33] Biological and cultural life cycles, an integrating proposal
    Diaz-Cordova, Diego
    VIRAJES-REVISTA DE ANTROPOLOGIA Y SOCIOLOGIA, 2020, 22 (02): : 132 - 160
  • [34] Culture and Emotion: The Integration of Biological and Cultural Contributions
    Matsumoto, David
    Hwang, Hyi Sung
    JOURNAL OF CROSS-CULTURAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2012, 43 (01) : 91 - 118
  • [35] A worldwide view of matriliny: using cross-cultural analyses to shed light on human kinship systems
    Surowiec, Alexandra
    Snyder, Kate T.
    Creanza, Nicole
    PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 2019, 374 (1780)
  • [36] Social Practice and Shared History, Not Social Scale, Structure Cross-Cultural Complexity in Kinship Systems
    Racz, Peter
    Passmore, Sam
    Jordan, Fiona M.
    TOPICS IN COGNITIVE SCIENCE, 2020, 12 (02) : 744 - 765
  • [37] Kaya forests: nucleus of cultural and biological diversity and functionality
    Habel, Jan Christian
    Schultze-Gebhardt, Kathrin
    Shauri, Halimu S.
    Maarifa, Ali M.
    Maghenda, Marianne
    Fungomeli, Maria
    Teucher, Mike
    JOURNAL OF TROPICAL ECOLOGY, 2023, 39
  • [38] Cultural kinship as a computational system: from bottom-up to top-down forms of social organization
    Read, Dwight
    COMPUTATIONAL AND MATHEMATICAL ORGANIZATION THEORY, 2012, 18 (02) : 232 - 253
  • [39] Cultural kinship as a computational system: from bottom-up to top-down forms of social organization
    Dwight Read
    Computational and Mathematical Organization Theory, 2012, 18 : 232 - 253
  • [40] Food taboos during pregnancy: meta-analysis on cross cultural differences suggests specific, diet-related pressures on childbirth among agriculturalists
    Maggiulli, Ornella
    Rufo, Fabrizio
    Johns, Sarah E.
    Wells, Jonathan C. K.
    PEERJ, 2022, 10