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Chuan-kang Shih

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Papers by Chuan-kang Shih

Research paper thumbnail of Quest for Harmony

Research paper thumbnail of Quest for Harmony: The Moso Traditions of Sexual Union and Family Life

Research paper thumbnail of Genesis of Marriage among the Moso and Empire-Building in Late Imperial China

The Journal of Asian Studies, May 1, 2001

Marriage has been widely accepted as a universal institution that allows a kinship system to esta... more Marriage has been widely accepted as a universal institution that allows a kinship system to establish and perpetuate itself (Levi-Strauss 1963). Although the well-known case of the Nayar in Central Kerala of India has seriously problematized the anthropological definitions of marriage (Gough 1959), the universality of the institution is still accepted up to this day (Ember and Ember 1999). Since the early 1980s, however, a growing body of literature on the Moso, a matrilineal group in Southwest China, has made available an ethnographic case in which marriage is not the primary sexual-reproductive institution (Zhan et al. 1980; Yan and Song 1983; YNSBJZ 1986, 1987, 1988; Shih 1993; Weng 1993; Guo 1997; Cai 1997). Among the Moso, the majority of adults have practiced a visiting system called tisese (pronounced as “tea-say-say”), which differs from marriage in that it is noncontractual, nonobligatory, and nonexclusive (Shih 1993). Meanwhile, mostly amongst the elites, marriage has coexisted with tisese in Moso society for centuries.

Research paper thumbnail of Navigating through the Web of Social Relations

Stanford University Press eBooks, Dec 7, 2009

Research paper thumbnail of Matrilineal Descent and Matrilineal Ideology

Stanford University Press eBooks, Dec 7, 2009

Research paper thumbnail of Religions and Rituals among the Moso

Stanford University Press eBooks, Dec 7, 2009

Research paper thumbnail of The People and Their History

Stanford University Press eBooks, Dec 7, 2009

Research paper thumbnail of The Political Structure and Cultural Environment of Traditional Moso Society

Stanford University Press eBooks, Dec 7, 2009

Research paper thumbnail of Marriage: The Secondary Pattern of Institutionalized Sexual Union

Stanford University Press eBooks, Dec 7, 2009

Research paper thumbnail of Quest for Harmony

Research paper thumbnail of Question de parenté || Tisese and Its Anthropological Significance : Issues around the Visiting Sexual System among the Moso

Research paper thumbnail of Navigating through the Web of Social Relations

Research paper thumbnail of Marriage: The Secondary Pattern of Institutionalized Sexual Union

Research paper thumbnail of Tisese: The Primary Pattern of Institutionalized Sexual Union

Research paper thumbnail of Matrilineal Descent and Matrilineal Ideology

Research paper thumbnail of The People and Their History

Research paper thumbnail of Religions and Rituals among the Moso

Research paper thumbnail of Household Life among the Moso

Research paper thumbnail of The Moso Social Organization

Research paper thumbnail of The Unusual Moso Gender Syste

Research paper thumbnail of Quest for Harmony

Research paper thumbnail of Quest for Harmony: The Moso Traditions of Sexual Union and Family Life

Research paper thumbnail of Genesis of Marriage among the Moso and Empire-Building in Late Imperial China

The Journal of Asian Studies, May 1, 2001

Marriage has been widely accepted as a universal institution that allows a kinship system to esta... more Marriage has been widely accepted as a universal institution that allows a kinship system to establish and perpetuate itself (Levi-Strauss 1963). Although the well-known case of the Nayar in Central Kerala of India has seriously problematized the anthropological definitions of marriage (Gough 1959), the universality of the institution is still accepted up to this day (Ember and Ember 1999). Since the early 1980s, however, a growing body of literature on the Moso, a matrilineal group in Southwest China, has made available an ethnographic case in which marriage is not the primary sexual-reproductive institution (Zhan et al. 1980; Yan and Song 1983; YNSBJZ 1986, 1987, 1988; Shih 1993; Weng 1993; Guo 1997; Cai 1997). Among the Moso, the majority of adults have practiced a visiting system called tisese (pronounced as “tea-say-say”), which differs from marriage in that it is noncontractual, nonobligatory, and nonexclusive (Shih 1993). Meanwhile, mostly amongst the elites, marriage has coexisted with tisese in Moso society for centuries.

Research paper thumbnail of Navigating through the Web of Social Relations

Stanford University Press eBooks, Dec 7, 2009

Research paper thumbnail of Matrilineal Descent and Matrilineal Ideology

Stanford University Press eBooks, Dec 7, 2009

Research paper thumbnail of Religions and Rituals among the Moso

Stanford University Press eBooks, Dec 7, 2009

Research paper thumbnail of The People and Their History

Stanford University Press eBooks, Dec 7, 2009

Research paper thumbnail of The Political Structure and Cultural Environment of Traditional Moso Society

Stanford University Press eBooks, Dec 7, 2009

Research paper thumbnail of Marriage: The Secondary Pattern of Institutionalized Sexual Union

Stanford University Press eBooks, Dec 7, 2009

Research paper thumbnail of Quest for Harmony

Research paper thumbnail of Question de parenté || Tisese and Its Anthropological Significance : Issues around the Visiting Sexual System among the Moso

Research paper thumbnail of Navigating through the Web of Social Relations

Research paper thumbnail of Marriage: The Secondary Pattern of Institutionalized Sexual Union

Research paper thumbnail of Tisese: The Primary Pattern of Institutionalized Sexual Union

Research paper thumbnail of Matrilineal Descent and Matrilineal Ideology

Research paper thumbnail of The People and Their History

Research paper thumbnail of Religions and Rituals among the Moso

Research paper thumbnail of Household Life among the Moso

Research paper thumbnail of The Moso Social Organization

Research paper thumbnail of The Unusual Moso Gender Syste

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