The prohibition of incest across societies

What is incest? Is it universally prohibited? Does this prohibition concern only « biological » kinships or does it extend to various « social » kinships, such as those that are formed today in so-called blended families but which also exist in many other societies?

This prohibition plays a fundamental role in the functioning of the multiple kinship systems studied throughout the world. But where does it come from? Can we think, with Claude Lévi-Strauss, that the prohibition of incest alone marks the passage from nature to culture? And how can we understand, then, the persistent tension between the proclaimed, institutionalized prohibition and the incestuous practice which, everywhere, remains?

World-renowned anthropologist Maurice Godelier highlights an essential fact, the spontaneously asocial and undifferentiated character of human sexuality and the need for a social regulation of this spontaneity. It thus brings to light the main teachings of anthropology on the question of incest, a major social fact of burning relevance today.

  • Maurice Godelier

    A world-renowned anthropologist, CNRS gold medalist, and winner of the Alexander von Humboldt International Prize in Social Sciences, Maurice Godelier is the author, among other classics, of La Production des Grands Hommes (1982), Les Métamorphoses de la parenté (2004), and L'Interdit de l'inceste (2021).

  • ISBN: 9782271138798
  • Size: 14 x 20.5 cm
  • Pages: 128
  • List price: 15 €
  • Publication date: 14/10/2021
Translated in
  • English
  • German