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Bioarchaeology and Kinship: Integrating Theory,Social Relatedness,and Biology in Ancient Family Research
Authors:Kent M. Johnson  Kathleen S. Paul
Affiliation:1.Center for Bioarchaeological Research, School of Human Evolution and Social Change,Arizona State University,Tempe,USA
Abstract:Theoretical developments in sociocultural anthropology have transformed the study of kinship. Here, we review these theoretical developments, consider their influence on bioarchaeological kinship research, and propose an alternative framework for studying relatedness in antiquity. We find that broader, more flexible conceptions of relatedness have grown increasingly prevalent in 21st-century bioarchaeology, but kinship research largely continues to emphasize methodological improvement and identification of biological kin in archaeological contexts. By approaching kinship as a multiscalar dimension of social identity, bioarchaeologists can leverage complex conceptions of relatedness with diverse types of data to gain nuanced perspectives on family-based social organization in the past.
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