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Kinship, love, and life cycle in con...
~
Harkonen, Heidi.
Kinship, love, and life cycle in contemporary Havana, Cuba[electronic resource] :to not die alone /
Record Type:
Language materials, printed : Monograph/item
[NT 15000414]:
302.09729123
Title/Author:
Kinship, love, and life cycle in contemporary Havana, Cuba : to not die alone // by Heidi Harkonen.
Author:
Harkonen, Heidi.
Published:
New York : : Palgrave Macmillan US :, 2016.
Description:
xvii, 247 p. : : ill., digital ;; 24 cm.
Contained By:
Springer eBooks
Subject:
Social interaction - Cuba
Subject:
Kinship - Cuba
Subject:
Families - Cuba
Subject:
Life cycle, Human.
Subject:
Social Sciences.
Subject:
Social Anthropology.
Subject:
Gender Studies.
ISBN:
9781137580764
ISBN:
9781137580757
[NT 15000228]:
1. Introduction: Bodies, Love, and Life in Urban Havana -- 2. Kinship as an Idiom for Social Relations -- 3. Fertility and Reproduction: Having a Child is Worth the Trouble -- 4. Becoming a Woman: Quince as a Moment of Female Sexuality -- 5. Love, Sexuality, and Adult Gender Relations: Nobody Likes Sleeping Alone -- 6. Old Age, Funerals, and Death: Reciprocating Care -- 7. The State as Family -- Conclusion: Time, Care, and Kinship.
[NT 15000229]:
This book is an ethnographic analysis of gender, kinship, and love in contemporary Cuba. The focus is on the lives of low-income Havana residents over the life cycle from birth to death. The book documents how kinship and love relations are created, reproduced, and negotiated at different life stages through gendered dialectics of care, important to both individuals' relationships and state politics. In the process, through a variety of practices and meanings, ranging from rituals to understandings of sexual desire, gender becomes affirmed as the central social difference characterizing Cuban society. The book argues that Cubans live their lives embedded in social networks of care that are both emotionally and pragmatically central to individual existence. At the same time, the island's contemporary political and economic changes carry gendered consequences to everyday relationships, with the potential to introduce unexpected changes to the life cycle.
Online resource:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-58076-4
Kinship, love, and life cycle in contemporary Havana, Cuba[electronic resource] :to not die alone /
Harkonen, Heidi.
Kinship, love, and life cycle in contemporary Havana, Cuba
to not die alone /[electronic resource] :by Heidi Harkonen. - New York :Palgrave Macmillan US :2016. - xvii, 247 p. :ill., digital ;24 cm.
1. Introduction: Bodies, Love, and Life in Urban Havana -- 2. Kinship as an Idiom for Social Relations -- 3. Fertility and Reproduction: Having a Child is Worth the Trouble -- 4. Becoming a Woman: Quince as a Moment of Female Sexuality -- 5. Love, Sexuality, and Adult Gender Relations: Nobody Likes Sleeping Alone -- 6. Old Age, Funerals, and Death: Reciprocating Care -- 7. The State as Family -- Conclusion: Time, Care, and Kinship.
This book is an ethnographic analysis of gender, kinship, and love in contemporary Cuba. The focus is on the lives of low-income Havana residents over the life cycle from birth to death. The book documents how kinship and love relations are created, reproduced, and negotiated at different life stages through gendered dialectics of care, important to both individuals' relationships and state politics. In the process, through a variety of practices and meanings, ranging from rituals to understandings of sexual desire, gender becomes affirmed as the central social difference characterizing Cuban society. The book argues that Cubans live their lives embedded in social networks of care that are both emotionally and pragmatically central to individual existence. At the same time, the island's contemporary political and economic changes carry gendered consequences to everyday relationships, with the potential to introduce unexpected changes to the life cycle.
ISBN: 9781137580764
Standard No.: 10.1057/978-1-137-58076-4doiSubjects--Topical Terms:
640609
Social interaction
--Cuba
LC Class. No.: HM1111 / .H375 2016
Dewey Class. No.: 302.09729123
Kinship, love, and life cycle in contemporary Havana, Cuba[electronic resource] :to not die alone /
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1. Introduction: Bodies, Love, and Life in Urban Havana -- 2. Kinship as an Idiom for Social Relations -- 3. Fertility and Reproduction: Having a Child is Worth the Trouble -- 4. Becoming a Woman: Quince as a Moment of Female Sexuality -- 5. Love, Sexuality, and Adult Gender Relations: Nobody Likes Sleeping Alone -- 6. Old Age, Funerals, and Death: Reciprocating Care -- 7. The State as Family -- Conclusion: Time, Care, and Kinship.
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This book is an ethnographic analysis of gender, kinship, and love in contemporary Cuba. The focus is on the lives of low-income Havana residents over the life cycle from birth to death. The book documents how kinship and love relations are created, reproduced, and negotiated at different life stages through gendered dialectics of care, important to both individuals' relationships and state politics. In the process, through a variety of practices and meanings, ranging from rituals to understandings of sexual desire, gender becomes affirmed as the central social difference characterizing Cuban society. The book argues that Cubans live their lives embedded in social networks of care that are both emotionally and pragmatically central to individual existence. At the same time, the island's contemporary political and economic changes carry gendered consequences to everyday relationships, with the potential to introduce unexpected changes to the life cycle.
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based on 0 review(s)
Multimedia
Multimedia file
http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-58076-4
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