idw – Informationsdienst Wissenschaft

Nachrichten, Termine, Experten

Grafik: idw-Logo
Science Video Project
idw-Abo

idw-News App:

AppStore

Google Play Store



Instance:
Share on: 
06/21/2018 11:00

Lecture by Stanford professor on the connections between inheritance, values, and social inequality

Stefan Schwendtner Presse- und Öffentlichkeitsarbeit
Max-Planck-Institut für ethnologische Forschung

    Since the 1980s social inequality has increased in industrialized nations as a result of the concentration of wealth in the hands of ever fewer people. In the annual Goody Lecture at the MPI for Social Anthropology, Prof. Sylvia J. Yanagisako of Stanford University will consider how inheritance and kinship relations contribute to this concentration of capital. The lecture will be held in English on Thursday 28 June at 18:00 at the institute, Advokatenweg 36 in Halle. The Goody Lectures are organized by Prof. Chris Hann, Director of the Department ‘Resilience and Transformation’.

    The lecture by Prof. Sylvia J. Yanagisako builds on the work of British anthropologist Jack Goody (1919–2015), who studied the importance of kinship and property relations in pre-industrial societies. Yanagisako considers how these factors continue to play a role today in contributing to an unequal distribution of capital in the prosperous nations of the West; her focus is on the legal structures that regulate inheritance in Italy and the United States. The tremendous concentration of wealth that has arisen since the 1980s was also a topic of Thomas Piketty’s influential book Capital in the Twenty-First Century. Piketty, however, misses the opportunity to show how kinship, economy, and moral values work in tandem to produce persistent social and economic inequality. Yanagisako will look more closely at this connection through an examination of how inheritance in the United States and Italy is a culturally and legally structured process by which kinship relations reproduce the accumulation of wealth and perpetuate social inequality.

    Sylvia J. Yanagisako is Chair of the Department of Anthropology at Stanford University. Her research focuses on the cultural processes that have shaped relations between kinship, gender, capitalism, and work in Italy and the United States.

    More information about the Goody Lectures:
    http://www.eth.mpg.de/3789573/Goody_Lectures

    Contact for this press release
    Prof. Dr. Chris Hann
    Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology
    Department ‘Resilience and Transformation in Eurasia’
    Advokatenweg 36, 06114 Halle (Saale)
    Tel.: 0345 2927-201
    E-mail: hann@eth.mpg.de
    http://www.eth.mpg.de/hann

    PR contact
    Stefan Schwendtner
    Press and Public Relations
    Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology
    Advokatenweg 36, 06114 Halle (Saale)
    Tel.: 0345 2927-425
    E-mail: schwendtner@eth.mpg.de
    http://www.eth.mpg.de


    Images

    Criteria of this press release:
    Journalists, Scientists and scholars, Students, Teachers and pupils
    Cultural sciences, Economics / business administration, Social studies
    regional
    Miscellaneous scientific news/publications
    English


     

    Help

    Search / advanced search of the idw archives
    Combination of search terms

    You can combine search terms with and, or and/or not, e.g. Philo not logy.

    Brackets

    You can use brackets to separate combinations from each other, e.g. (Philo not logy) or (Psycho and logy).

    Phrases

    Coherent groups of words will be located as complete phrases if you put them into quotation marks, e.g. “Federal Republic of Germany”.

    Selection criteria

    You can also use the advanced search without entering search terms. It will then follow the criteria you have selected (e.g. country or subject area).

    If you have not selected any criteria in a given category, the entire category will be searched (e.g. all subject areas or all countries).