How are different cultures to be described and compared? This book
provides a clear and concise discussion of the theoretical issues
involved in ethnographic description and comparative study. Taking up
the classic problems in the study of of social organisation, Professor
Goodenough describes the major issues in the cross-cultural study of
kinship and the family, revealing the kinds of constants, both formal
and functional, on which such study must be based. The result is new
definitions of marriage, family and parenthood for use in cross-cultural
analysis and a greater understanding of this form of analysis itself.
The statement on the interdependence of description and comparison in
cultural anthropology and its implications for a science of culture,
provides fresh insights into cross-cultural analysis for both the
theoretical and the practical anthropologist.