We think about personal relationships in two distinct ways. The first focuses on relationships between blood relatives: parents and their children, siblings, and perhaps first cousins. The second focuses on intimacy: relationships where each individual is honest to and trusting of the other; each cares for the other and seeks the other’s company. In this article I ask how these two conceptions are, can be, or should be linked. Should we strive to make all relationships with kin intimate? Even if the answer is a qualified “No,” does that mean relationships with kin are not valuable? I offer some tentative answers to these questions. Despite its limitations, I hope this provides a framework from which future exploration of these issues might ...
When we think of kinship, we usually think of ties between people based upon blood or marriage. But ...
Whether marriage has a social integrating function or a privatizing function on interaction with net...
The importance of kin relationships was investigated across adulthood with 5 samples (total N = 1,36...
We think about personal relationships in two distinct ways. The first focuses on relationships betwe...
We think about personal relationships in two distinct ways. The first focuses on relationships betwe...
textabstractKin relationships are traditionally defined as ties based on blood and marriage. They in...
It has been argued (Carsten 2004) that kinship involves not just rights, rules, and obligations but ...
Family is special. People avoid sexual contact with close relatives, but at the same time are highly...
My article draws on a yearlong fieldwork conducted in Lebanon and builds on the existing literature ...
Kinship theory predicts that people will be more willing to engage, support, and, as a consequence, ...
This study explored how participants discursively rendered voluntary kin relationships sensical and ...
This Special Issue brings together contributions by scholars working on various family configuration...
Increases in parental cohabitation, separation or divorce, and re‐partnering or remarriage have gene...
FAMILIES FORM ONE of the most important domains in people’s lives. At the individual level, having g...
This study explored how participants discursively rendered voluntary kin relationshi...
When we think of kinship, we usually think of ties between people based upon blood or marriage. But ...
Whether marriage has a social integrating function or a privatizing function on interaction with net...
The importance of kin relationships was investigated across adulthood with 5 samples (total N = 1,36...
We think about personal relationships in two distinct ways. The first focuses on relationships betwe...
We think about personal relationships in two distinct ways. The first focuses on relationships betwe...
textabstractKin relationships are traditionally defined as ties based on blood and marriage. They in...
It has been argued (Carsten 2004) that kinship involves not just rights, rules, and obligations but ...
Family is special. People avoid sexual contact with close relatives, but at the same time are highly...
My article draws on a yearlong fieldwork conducted in Lebanon and builds on the existing literature ...
Kinship theory predicts that people will be more willing to engage, support, and, as a consequence, ...
This study explored how participants discursively rendered voluntary kin relationships sensical and ...
This Special Issue brings together contributions by scholars working on various family configuration...
Increases in parental cohabitation, separation or divorce, and re‐partnering or remarriage have gene...
FAMILIES FORM ONE of the most important domains in people’s lives. At the individual level, having g...
This study explored how participants discursively rendered voluntary kin relationshi...
When we think of kinship, we usually think of ties between people based upon blood or marriage. But ...
Whether marriage has a social integrating function or a privatizing function on interaction with net...
The importance of kin relationships was investigated across adulthood with 5 samples (total N = 1,36...