Kinship: Historical and contemporary frontiers
Programm
For
several decades, kinship was retreating from the attention of students
of contemporary societies. This was true for sociology, where the
Durkheim-Parsons orthodoxy emphasized the emergence of the nuclear
family and the withering away of wider kinship networks. It was even
true for anthropology, where the former bread-and-butter topic of
kinship lost its attraction and fell out of fashion. Historians also
generally assumed a decline of kinship systems in modern Western
societies as nuclear-type families tended to prevail.
Today,
this neglect has proved to be mistaken. There is a renewed interest in
kinship as a grammar of social interaction, as a basis for interpersonal
support and exchange, as a pillar of social security and the welfare
society, as a link across the discontinuities of migration, and as an
embedding structure for economic transactions and organizations. In this
situation, a new discussion between historical and contemporary work on
kinship is in order. It helps both sides to broaden and at the same
time reaffirm their disciplinary perspectives. The workshop will take up
some of the issues where this discussion seems especially promising.
EUI
researchers who would like to participate can sign up with Liz Webb. If
you want to take the workshop for credits, you should contact the EUI
organizers early enough.
PROGRAM
Thursday, May 15
14.00-17.30
Introduction
Contested categories: Genealogies, adoptions and spiritual ties
Chair: Giulia Calvi
Ohad Parnes, Stefan Willer & Ulrike Vedder
Genius, bastard, bachelor: Genealogical failures in 19th century literature and science
Katharina Stornig
Religious female orders in 20th century colonial settings: Competing for kinship
Stefania Bernini
Adoption in 20th century Poland
Discussant: Sigrid Weigel
18.00-19.00
Keynote address
Christiane Klapisch-Zuber
Kinship symbols and images in Europe
Friday, May 16
09.00-13.00
Kinship in firms and professions
Chair: Martin Kohli
Harold James
Family firms in the 20th century
Nicole Schmiade & Isabell Stamm
Family enterprises and enterpreneurial families
Barbara Curli
Women entrepreneurs in 20th century Italy: Patterns of generational transmission of business knowledge
Sandra Cavallo
Kinship ties in the early modern medical profession
Discussant: Giulia Calvi
14.30-18.30
Kinship in welfare and migration
Chair: Sigrid Weigel
Pier Paolo Viazzo
European kinship patterns and the welfare state
Franca van Hooren
Migrant domestic carers in Italy and the Netherlands
Laura Block
Marriage migration
Karin Sundsback
Women migrants from Norway to Amsterdam and New York in the 17th century
Discussant: Martin Kohli
Saturday, May 17
10.00-13.00
Challenges for contemporary regulation
Chair: Giulia Calvi
Irène Théry
New forms of alliance
Giulia Zanini
New reproductive technologies
Closing discussion