Title: What is a family
1What is a family?
- Think and write down what a family is to you.
2Family is a complex concept
- Entails
- 1. Structure of kin group
- 2. Functions
- a. roles
- b. rights and responsibilities
- 3. Sentimental and emotional aspects
- 4. Legal definitions
- 5. Durability
3Redemptive Process
- The way that individuals fulfill their
obligations in relation to the moral imperatives
of their community. It guides their judgments
about human worth and dignity, and of their
assumptions about power
4Issues addressed-multicultural
- Cultural miscommunication
- Invidious judgments
- explanations for different family forms
- Judicial consequences
- Moral choices
5Groups studied
- Lakota Ella Deloria, Speaking of Indians
- African American Beverly Green, African
American Families and - Margaret L. Usdansky, For many blacks, family
tree long splintered - Families in your discussion section
6Unit Goals
- You will be able to define and correctly apply
key concepts that we use to understand different
family forms
Cross cousins
lineage
Bilateral descent
patrilocality
7Deloria faced ethnocentrism
- Addresses missionaries and other white service
providers
8Carlisle (PA) Indian Boarding School1879-1918Lak
ota children http//www.wordsasweapons.com/indians
chool.htm
Photo by J.N. Choate, "Wounded Yellow Robe, Henry
Standing Bear, Timber Yellow Robe Taken 6 Months
After Entrance to School," n.d., albumen print
mounted on card. The photo is from the
Waidner-Spahr Library, Special Collections,
Dickinson College
Photo by J.N. Choate, "Wounded Yellow Robe, Henry
Standing Bear, Timber Yellow Robe Taken Upon
Their Arrival in Carlisle," n.d., albumen print
mounted on card. The photo is from the
Waidner-Spahr Library, Special Collections,
Dickinson College
9Role of Indian Boarding Schools
- To acculturate Indian youth into American society
10Role of Indian Boarding Schools
- To acculturate Indian youth into American society
- Acculturate to transmit the characteristics of
one culture to members of another culture
11Role of Indian Boarding Schools
- To acculturate Indian youth into American society
- Acculturate to transmit the characteristics of
one culture to members of another culture - Enculturate to transmit cultural forms from one
generation to another.
Cheyenne woman named Woxie Haury in ceremonial
dress, and, in wedding portrait with husband. Two
studio portraits on left she poses with her hair
down, in a beaded fringed dress, necklace, and
beaded moccasins. On right she wears a
western-style wedding dress (full length skirt,
boned bodice, hair pinned up under a lace veil)
and stands beside a young man in white
tie.Photograph Woxie HauryCollection Estelle
Reel Repository Eastern Washington State Hist.
Soc. http//www.english.uiuc.edu/maps/poets/a_f/er
drich/boarding/gallery.htm
Jim Crow Dog Family 1891
12This unit has some complex ideas
13(No Transcript)
14Ella Deloria 1881-1971
Ella Deloria, A Scheme of Life that Worked
15Ancestral Lands of the Lakota
16Contemporary reservations
17Brule Lakota Camp, 1891
"The Villa Brule." A Brule Lakota camp at Pine
Ridge reservation in Dakota Territory, 1891.
Photograph by J. C. H. Grabill. Library of
Congress
18Dakota family
- All Dakota kin to one another
- Defined who belonged and who was a stranger
Maxine Stoll Everything Is a Circle
19Basic code
- One must obey kinship rules
- One must be a good relative
- Note that people who could not be linked by blood
or marriage could be given a place social
kinship
20Lakota kinship
Parallel cousins
Cross cousins
Euro-American kinship
21Lakota Families
- Mothers brothers uncle
- Fathers sisters aunt
22Social kinshp
- Friends and neighbors
- Means of making kin of outsiders
23Why so complex?
- Courtesy Always address a person by their kin
term - Height of rudeness to not use proper kin term
Only to animals might you speak so rudely - Creates a channel of trust and reciprocity
- Almost the same term used to address people and
God. - Non-kin might be deceitful
- like Iktomi
24Prescribed attitude toward others
- Act foolishly towards Mother and Father
- Be serious and protective toward sons and
daughters - Avoidance son-in-law with mother-in-law
- daughter-in-law with father-in-law
- post-puberty brothers and sisters
- Joking brother- and sister-in-law
- For more, see http//www.airc.org/living/tiyospaye
.html - Deloria Life in Tipi and Camp Circle
http//www.sicc.sk.ca/heritage/ethnography/dnl/com
munity/life_in_tipi.html - http//mreid.com/lakota/tiyki.htm
25Basis of dispute resolution
- Kin intervene
- Call upon aggrieved parties to act properly as
kin to one another - Odakota a state or condition of peace
26Lakota Kinship
- Call a person by kin term, not given name (rude)
- Obligatory respect (override impulsive behaviors)
- Created peaceful relationships
- Created trustworthy relationships
- Distinguished a cultured being from an animal or
a child
27Dysfunctional families
- Assumes a specific family form as functional
28Tuesday - READ
29Lakota FamiliesDoris Little Eagle with
grandchildren