âDrawing on a wonderfully diverse array of sources, and in a dazzling display of analytic brilliance, Marilyn Strathern traces the parallel trajectories of ârelationââas comparison and as kinshipâfrom the seventeenth century to the twenty-first. Relations of both kinds, and the connections and knowledge that bind them, will be apprehended differently after reading this extraordinary work.â
- Janet Carsten, Professor of Social and Cultural Anthropology, University of Edinburgh,
âAn extraordinary work by one of today's preeminent scholars in the field of anthropology, <i>Relations</i> radically transforms our understanding of both kin-making and knowledge-making as well as the depths and productivity of their entwinement. It does so not only in the epistemic and relational cosmology of the English-speaking world but also, by the light of comparison, in those of other cultural worlds. A profoundly illuminating book.â
- Susan McKinnon, Professor Emerita of Anthropology, University of Virginia,
â<i>Relations</i> unfolds as a tour-de-force in the history, philosophy, and anthropology of social descriptors, bedazzling its readers as it charts how relations have sneaked between the limits of every account of (more-than-)human affairs, at every turn rekindling the magic and the challenge of anthropological analysis.â
- Alberto CorsĂn JimĂŠnez, Reader in Social Anthropology, Spanish National Research Council,
"<i>Relations </i>is an event in Strathern's own sense: fresh evidence of the capacity to relate, which gains and adds dimensions in time.⌠Please read <i>Relations</i>âŚ: it holds the promise that <i>you</i> and <i>I</i>â<i>we</i>âwill never be the same."
- Ashley Lebner, American Ethnologist
"<i>Relations</i> is a conceptual page-turner narrated through an arc of mystery. . . . <i>Relations</i> synthesizes its authorâs ferocious curiosity about who puts worlds together and how they do so through concepts. The consequences are, she argues, all around us. By arranging precisely selected descriptions, Strathern offers us a glimpse of what is normally occluded, her deployment of analytical subtlety and narrative wit making the force in and to exposition demonstrable."
- Rachel Douglas-Jones, American Anthropologist
"The breadth and depth of sources Strathern employs in her inquiry is exacting, particular, yet formidable still. She draws from fields as disparate as the philosophy of science, biology, art, and literary criticism, and the work of other anthropologists. . . . There is much food for thought on offer in thinking about relations from Strathernâs relatively short yet dense inquiry."
- Arthur Ivan Bravo, Anthropology Book Forum