Javascript must be enabled to continue!
New Cross-Cultural Perspectives on Marriage Transactions
View through CrossRef
This article refines and extends previous cross-cultural research on marriage transactions (e.g., bride wealth, dowry). The authors begin by expanding the standard cross-cultural typology of marriage transactions. They identify six additional kinds of transactions (e.g., groom wealth, groom service) and show that many societies of the Human Relations Area Files (HRAF) probability sample have two or more types of transactions. Next, the authors take a Darwinian approach to marriage transactions. Differences in male and female reproductive strategies account for the general pattern of the bride’s family materially benefitting from marriage at the expense of the groom’s family. Kin selection theory explains why wealth devolves from the parents of the couple to the bride and groom. Finally, the authors examine evidence that the type of kin relied on by members of a society and the prevalence of polygyny also influence marriage transactions in predictable ways.
SAGE Publications
Title: New Cross-Cultural Perspectives on Marriage Transactions
Description:
This article refines and extends previous cross-cultural research on marriage transactions (e.
g.
, bride wealth, dowry).
The authors begin by expanding the standard cross-cultural typology of marriage transactions.
They identify six additional kinds of transactions (e.
g.
, groom wealth, groom service) and show that many societies of the Human Relations Area Files (HRAF) probability sample have two or more types of transactions.
Next, the authors take a Darwinian approach to marriage transactions.
Differences in male and female reproductive strategies account for the general pattern of the bride’s family materially benefitting from marriage at the expense of the groom’s family.
Kin selection theory explains why wealth devolves from the parents of the couple to the bride and groom.
Finally, the authors examine evidence that the type of kin relied on by members of a society and the prevalence of polygyny also influence marriage transactions in predictable ways.
Related Results
Mona Caird
Mona Caird
The feminist novelist and essayist Mona Caird (b. 1854–d. 1932) was propelled to fame in the summer of 1888 when her Westminster Review essay “Marriage” became the focus of the gre...
Does the Shortage of Marriageable Women Induce the Trafficking of Women for Forced Marriage? Evidence From China
Does the Shortage of Marriageable Women Induce the Trafficking of Women for Forced Marriage? Evidence From China
This article examines whether a shortage of marriageable women induces trafficking of women for forced marriage in China as commonly expected. I assemble a data set of 1,215 transa...
Cross-cultural Encounters in Urban Festivals: Between Liberation and Domination
Cross-cultural Encounters in Urban Festivals: Between Liberation and Domination
This paper is part of a wider research project on Paradoxical Spaces: Encountering the Other in Public Space that explores how cultural difference is practiced and negotiated in di...
The Riverside Roads of Culture as a Tool for the Development of Aitoloakarnania
The Riverside Roads of Culture as a Tool for the Development of Aitoloakarnania
Cultural routes are a well-established development tool to highlight and promote a region’s cultural and environmental reserve, as well as having a positive impact on a region’s so...
Paths of Marriage in Istanbul
Paths of Marriage in Istanbul
This essay focuses on the complex interplay between choice and arrangement in marriage processes that emerges from the life stories of 15 couples from diverse origins living in Ist...
The Austronesian Game Taxonomy: A cross-cultural dataset of historical games
The Austronesian Game Taxonomy: A cross-cultural dataset of historical games
AbstractHumans in most cultures around the world play rule-based games, yet research on the content and structure of these games is limited. Previous studies investigating rule-bas...
Negotiating Cultural Identity in The Inheritance of Loss
Negotiating Cultural Identity in The Inheritance of Loss
This paper seeks to explore three modes of cultural identification presented in Kiran Desai’s The Inheritance of Loss. With three intersecting plotlines, the novel focuses on three...
Bridging the Divide: Marriage Politics across the Caucasus
Bridging the Divide: Marriage Politics across the Caucasus
The early relationships between the polities of Armenia and K‘art‘li in the South Caucasus and their neighbours in the North Caucasus is a central, but underappreciated, factor in ...