Lexington Books
Pages: 290
Trim: 6⅜ x 9½
978-0-7391-2867-1 • Hardback • July 2009 • $136.00 • (£105.00)
Timothy T. Schwartz is an independent researcher and consultant working in Haiti and the Dominican Republic.
Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 2 Review of the Literature
Chapter 3 The Commune of Jean Rabel
Chapter 4 Extremely High Fertility
Chapter 5 The Pronatal Sociocultural Fertility Complex
Chapter 6 The Sexual Moral Economy
Chapter 7 House, Yard, and Market
Chapter 8 Farming and Household-Based Production
Chapter 9 Fishing
Chapter 10 Work, Craftsmen, and Marketing Specialists
Chapter 11 Labor Demands
Chapter 12 Gender and Age-Based Divisions of Labor
Chapter 13 What Parents Have to Say about the Economic Utility of Children
Chapter 14 Raising Children and Control over Child Labor Activities
Chapter 15 Conjugal Union and the Formation of the Household
Chapter 16 Polygyny, Progeny, and Production
Chapter 17 Caribbean Family Patterns
Chapter 18 Fewer Men, More Babies
Chapter 19 A Reflexive and Critical Look at the Anthropology of the Caribbean
Schwartz challenges prevailing wisdom in the field of demography with a strong set of data. He shows the relationship between marriage, family, fertility, agriculture, and emigration in rural Haiti. He relates beliefs with behavior and opportunities and strategies for living. In the process he makes much sense of rural Haitian life and shows how the Haitian pattern he outlines can be seen in other islands of the Caribbean too.
— Bill Wedenoja, Missouri State University
Rich, sophisticated, authentic, provocative, the work of a genuine anthropologist.
— Robert Lawless, Wichita State University