Question

Family and Kinship in Village India
DAVID W. McCURDY
Summary In this article, David McCurdy describes the importance of kinship among rural Bhil tribal peoples living in Ratakote, a hill village located in the southern part of Rajasthan near Udaipur, India. He argues that an elaborate and extended kinship system is not only a useful way for peasants to organize their labor, land holdings, and broader social connections, but that it is also a system that can be adapted to the market-dominated economic system currently emerging in India.
Americans find it difficult to comprehend the importance of extended kinship, but for the Bhils, the significance of kinship seems elementary. A wedding arranged by a villager for his daughter in 1985 illustrates the point nicely. To begin the arrangement, the father must consult the members of his patrilineage, who must later provide money and labor for the wedding. He will send out word to his feminal kinthe relatives of the women who have married into his line and the relatives of the men that women of his line have marriedin other villages. When prospective grooms are found, the first consideration is clan membership. Clans are large and consist of local lineages living in many villages over a wide territory. Bhils cannot marry into their own, their mother's, or their father's mother's clans; this constitutes incest.
Once a suitable spouse is found, negotiations commence to set a dapa (bride price), the money and prestige goods given by the groom's family to that of the bride. Bride price is part of an exchange for the labor and loyalty of the bride. Marriage becomes an alliance between the two families but involves potential conflict. To clearly state that rights to her loyalty, labor, and children shift to her husband's family at marriage, the wedding ceremony symbolizes the bride's removal from her natal group. After marriage, a relationship built on formal respect keeps the bride's family at a proper distance.
Extended kinship systems seem well suited to agrarian peasant life where families best control landholding and economic production. Today, India is industrializing and the market economy is attracting many rural peasants to cities as well as restructuring economic relationships in rural villages. The market economy can easily weaken kinship systems by providing individuals with salaries and independence, causing people to move to find work, and creating jobs that compete for time with family obligations. Despite expansion of the market, Indians, including the Bhils described in this article, have adapted kinship relationships to provide support as they scatter across their country and around the world.
In "Family and Kinship in Village India," McCurdy notes that when a groom ritually breaks into his future bride's house at the beginning of the final wedding ceremony, the act is one way to symbolize her movement from her natal family to his.

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