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Political Kinship in Pakistan Stephen M. Lyon

Political Kinship in Pakistan By Stephen M. Lyon

Political Kinship in Pakistan by Stephen M. Lyon


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Summary

In Political Kinship in Pakistan, Steve Lyon draws on more than two decades of ethnographic research to depict descent and marriage networks as a critical mechanism for the maintenance of the Pakistan government and the construction of allies.

Political Kinship in Pakistan Summary

Political Kinship in Pakistan: Descent, Marriage, and Government Stability by Stephen M. Lyon

In Political Kinship in Pakistan, Stephen M. Lyon illustrates how contemporary politics in Pakistan are built on complex kinship networks created through marriage and descent relations. Lyon points to kinship as a critical mechanism for understanding both Pakistan's continued inability to develop strong and stable governments, and its incredible durability in the face of pressures that have led to the collapse and failure of other states around the world.

Political Kinship in Pakistan Reviews

India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Sri Lanka are famous for their political dynasties, the Nehrus in India and the Bhuttos in Pakistan being the most renowned. Their histories indicate the fundamental importance of kinship ties in South Asian societies (and elsewhere), a subject to which the renowned anthropologists E. E. Evans-Pritchard and Francis Hsu have made major contributions. Lyon (Aga Khan Univ., Pakistan) is an anthropologist who has spent over two decades visiting and living in Attock, northern Pakistan, studying local society. This fine volume follows his previous book, An Anthropological Analysis of Local Politics and Patronage in a Pakistani Village (2004), and a number of journal articles and book chapters on the subject. From a consideration of the importance of kinship to detailed descriptions of kinship ties among various families, Lyon forcefully argues that the ties that bind and serve as the basis of Pakistani politics are those based on kinship. In arguing this he offers an analysis of the rise of Prime Minister Imran Khan, claiming his victory was only made possible through the links to the large and powerful kinship networks of his second and third wives. This is essential reading. Summing Up: Essential. All levels.

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In the field of Pakistani Studies, Political Kinship makes an important and timely contribution, rendering visible the complex networks beneath the surface among Pakistan's elites, both at regional and national level, while raising questions about how power is sustained and the state survives, despite its seeming descent as it lurches from one crisis to the next. -- Pnina Werbner, Professor Emerita, Keele University
As an anthropology professor, I have been looking for new ethnographies that retain the holistic, thick descriptive breadth of traditional ethnographic monographs. I would want such an ethnography to be undergraduate friendly, not laden with academic jargon, yet updated and infused with contemporary theoretical perspectives, methods, and concerns. Political Kinship in Pakistan is that book. Stephen M. Lyon has conducted fieldwork for decades in a Punjabi village as well as worked in Lahore. He combines his descriptions and insights into the daily ebb and flow of conflict and cooperation among villagers into an analysis of the contextualized, but systematic distribution of power at the local level. Using an emic (insider) perspective he shows how power is constructed and manipulated through kinship ties, wealth, and modes of alliances. He expands on the ethnographic focus to link the ideas and organizations associated with local power to an analysis of national level politics. Lyons writes with grace, and moves seamlessly from Evans-Pritchard to Foucault, relying on theories as tools for explanation, rather than as means to perform scholarship. I would recommend this book for area courses on Asia or for introductory cultural anthropology courses. -- Victor C. de Munck, Vilnius University and State University of New York at New Paltz
Stephen Lyon is a great storyteller. His stories enable a thorough understanding of the intricacies of kinship in local as well as national politics. -- Martin Soekefeld, Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich
Stephen M. Lyon's deep understanding of kinship provides a unique and fascinating prism through which to understand the culture and politics of a country that has rarely been examined in such depth. -- Ali Khan, Lahore University of Management Sciences
Drawing on two decades of ethnographic fieldwork in Pakistan, Stephen Lyon expertly illuminates the critical effects that kinship networks have on local and national power arrangements. His argument that cultural systems of attachment shape the larger political landscape, and significantly account for a resilient Pakistani state that few would have predicted, is both astute and bold. -- James Piscatori, Australian National University, coauthor of Muslim Politics

About Stephen M. Lyon

Stephen M. Lyon is professor of anthropology and head of educational programs and development at Aga Khan University.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1 Kinship and Politics

Chapter 2 Strong Man Politics, Pakistan and Methods

Chapter 3 Waves of Elites

Chapter 4 Descent, Marriage and Building Networks

Chapter 5 Kinship and Conflict Management at the local level

Chapter 6 Landed Elite

Chapter 7 Industrialist and Populist Challengers

Additional information

NLS9781498582193
9781498582193
1498582192
Political Kinship in Pakistan: Descent, Marriage, and Government Stability by Stephen M. Lyon
New
Paperback
Lexington Books
2021-10-15
150
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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