Melville Herskovits was a proponent of the African retention school, which argues that African culture survived slavery and is still evident in parts of Caribbean culture. While some African cultural forms were lost, others survived in three main ways: through survivals that closely resemble original African forms; through syncretisms that identify new world practices with African counterparts; and through reinterpretations where African practices took new forms to suit the environment but still reflected African influence at their core. Herskovits examined Caribbean family forms and contended examples of each type of survival can still be seen in aspects of Caribbean cultural life today.