Continuing the comparative survey of pre-industrial family formation
undertaken in The Development of Family and Marriage in Europe (1983),
Professor Goody looks in depth at kinship practice in Asia. His findings
cause him to question many traditional assumptions about the "primitive"
East, and he suggests that, in contrast to pre-colonial Africa, kinship
practice in Asia has much in common with that prevailing in parts of
pre-industrial Europe. Goody examines the transmission of productive and
other property in relation both to the prevailing political economy and
to family and ideological structures, and explores the distribution of
mechanisms and strategies of management across cultures. The book
concludes that notions of western "uniqueness" are often misplaced, and
that much previous work on Asian kinship has been unwittingly distorted
by the application of concepts and approaches derived from other,
inappropriate, social formations.