Title: Social Organization
1Social Organization
2Marriage, Family, Kinship
- Marriage
- rules of sexual access
- form of exchange establishes alliances
- accords a child full birth-status rights common
to normal members of his society or social
stratum. - family -- smallest, organized unit of kin and
non-kin who interact daily, providing for the
domestic needs of children and ensuring their
survival - descent group -- who one is related to beyond
marriage - Alliance -- relations between descent groups
3Forms of Marriage
- Monogamy marriage between two partners
- Polygamy plural marriage an individual has
more than one spouse - Polygyny one man many wives
- Polyandry one woman many husbands
- No marriage
- Serial monogamy preferred practice in the West?
4Other Forms of Marriage
- Same Sex Marriages
- A Nuer woman who is unable to have children is
sometimes married as a "husband" to another woman
who then is impregnated by a secret boyfriend. - The barren woman becomes the socially recognized
father and thereby adds members to her father's
patrilineal kin group
5Other Forms of marriage Ghost Marriage
- A Nuer man may marry a woman as a stand-in for
his deceased brother - the children that are born of this union will be
considered descendents of the dead man -- the
"ghost" is the socially recognized father - allows the continuation of the family line and
succession to an important social position - A Nuer woman of wealth may marry a deceased man
to keep her wealth and power - there will be no living husband, though she may
subsequently have children - She is, in effect, a widow who takes care of her
husband's wealth and children until they are
mature
6Forms of Marriage
- Levirate sororate
- Levirate a widow marries dead husbands brother
- Sororate a widower marries dead wifes sister
- Keeps inheritance within the same group
7Levi-Strauss on Marriage as Exchange
- Levi-Strauss "It's not the man that marries the
maid, but field marries field, vineyard marries
vineyard, cattle marries cattle - a set of rights the couple their families
obtain over one another, including rights to the
couple's children
8Marriage and wealth exchange
- Bridewealth
- payment to wife and/or wifes family
- pays for loss of daughter
- Dowry
- payment to husband and/or husband family
- correlated to low women gender status
- pays for adding women to descent group
9MARRIAGE EXCHANGES
- marriage means alliances
- people don't just take a spouse they assume
obligations to a group of in-laws - often more a relationship between groups than one
between individuals-marriage involves
10are people buying their wives? Or how is a wife
like a T.V.?
- the price is negotiated rights are not given to
the husband until the deal is done - if the woman proves barren or troublesome the
goods are often refunded - women have voice in the transactions
- women also has rights of her own in the marriage
relationship (commodities don't) - the woman her kinfolk can also end the marriage
if husband does not meet obligations
11buying selling of commodities is a one time
event
- bridewealth establishes an enduring bundle of
reciprocal rights obligations between relatives
of the couple that will last as long as the
marriage lasts
12Levi-Strauss and women as objects of exchange
- marriage systems - a form of exchange - "that as
soon as I am forbidden a woman, she thereby
becomes available to another man, and somewhere
else a man renounces a woman who thereby becomes
available to me." (Levi-Strauss51) - wife givers wife takers
- nevertheless, as exchange marriage implies
reciprocity obligations assumed in creation
maintenance of alliances
13Marriage and the Family
- Variation in forms of marriage related to
variations in forms of family - Nuclear family parents and children
- Extended family 3 or more generations
- Joint family or collateral household siblings,
their spouses and children - Forms of family change over time, over life cycle
14Forms of Family Subsistence
- Forager band group of nuclear families
- Industrial economy also nuclear family
- Neither foragers nor industrial societies tied to
the land - Emphasis on mobility, small-size,
self-sufficiency - Cultivators and Horticulturalists extended,
joint, collateral households - Extended family associated with sedentary
cultivation, herding private property - Keeps property in family
- Provides needed labor
15Family in Canada, Europe, US
- A unit bounded biologically legally
- Associated with property
- Economic self sufficiency
- Associated with emotional life
- Associated with a space inside a home
- Emerges in complex state-governed societies
- Keep neighbors out compared to others that add
children neighbors as kin
16The Modern Euro-North American Family
- Family nurturance, biofunction, love
affection, cooperation, enduring relationships,
unconditional - Market sale of labour, negotiate contractual
relations of business, competitive, temporary,
contingent relations, law legal sanctions - family as last refuge against the state (domestic
issues police) - family and litigation today - family becoming
contract
17Post-Marital Residence Patterns
- Patrilocal
- Matrilocal
- Bi-local
- Neolocal
- Avunculocal living with mothers brother or
fathers sister - Virilocal living with husbands relatives
(patrilineal descent) - Uxorilocal living with wifes relatives
(matrilineal descent)
18Post-Marital Residence Patterns
- 70 of all societies patrilocal
- Matrifocal households women headed households
with no permanently resident husband-father - Patrifocal 3 men and a baby?
- Post-marital residence patterns change during
life cycle of marriage, over time
19KINSHIP STUDIES
20SUFFIXES
- Lineal line of descent
- Local place of residence
- Lateral of or relating to the side
- Archy government
21KIN TYPES
- Consanguineals
- Affinals
- fictive kin
- Lineals
- Collaterals
22DESCENT TERMS
- Bilateral
- Unilineal
- Matrilineal
- Patrilineal
- Cognatic
23Endogamous Groups Marriage Partners
24Kinship Descent
- For some societies kinship descent lines are
the main way people organize themselves - Kinship societies
- The relationships established within the
biological group and outside the biological
group are coded in kin terms
25Kinship Patterns
- Relations of descent (endogamy)
- Consanguineal relationships (sanguine red)
- Relations of blood
- Relations of alliance (exogamy)
- Affinal relationships (affinity)
- Through marriage (in-laws)
26kinship and descent
- kinship as an idiom
- a way of expressing social relations and the
exchanges, rights, and obligations implied - selective
- each system emphasizes different relations
- kinship principles define social groups
- produces forms of social stratification
- locate people within those groups
- position people and groups in relation to one
another both in space and time
27kin terms
- sometimes mark specific relationships, sometimes
lump together several genealogical relations - lineal relatives/consanguines - ancestor,
descendent on direct line of descent to or from
ego - collateral kin - all other biological kin,
siblings, nieces, nephews, aunts, uncles - affines - relatives by marriage
28 Relationships are traced through a central
individual labelled EGO.
29kinship diagram
30UNILINEAL DESCENT (unilateral)
- descent group membership figured exclusively
through female or male side - matrilineal descent
- patrilineal descent
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32Matrilineal and Patrilineal Kin
- Patrilineal , or agnatic, relatives are
identified by tracing descent exclusively through
males from a founding male ancestor. - Matrilineal , or uterine, relatives are
identified by tracing descent exclusively through
females from a founding female ancestor.
33Patrilineage -- male ego
34Patrilineage female ego
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36cross relatives
- kin on each side, who are neither patrilineal or
matrilineal - cross cousins are of particular importance,
especially for some marriage systems - Cross cousins can be identified as the children
of opposite sexed siblings (of a brother and
sister) and parallel cousins as the children of
same sexed siblings (of two brothers or two
sisters).
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38Bilateral Descent
- Also called cognatic descent
- Canada, US, Europe
- ego sees his or her relatives on both sides as
being of equal closeness relevance - the degree of closeness is based on generational
distance separating the individuals (our system)
39Strengths of Bilateral System
- Overlapping membership
- Widely extended, can form broad networks
- Flexible
- Useful for groups that do not live in same place
- Useful when valued resources are limited
40Extensions of kin groups
- lineage
- matrilineage
- patrilineage
- segmentary lineage
- clan
- phratry
- moiety
- kindred
41Structures of Descent
- lineages (patri matri) - common ancestor
- clan several lineages common ancestor, usually
large groups that are associated with mythical
ancestors - phratry - unilineal descent group composed of a
number of supposedly related clans - moieties - means half, when an entire society is
divided into 2 unilineal descent groups - many societies have 2 or more types of descent
groups in various combinations - some have lineages clans, others may have clans
phrateries but no lineages
42Lineage
- a corporate descent group whose members trace
their genealogical links to a common ancestor - corporate shares resources in common
- own property
- organize labour
- assign status
- regulate relations with other groups
- endures beyond individual members
43Clan (or sib)
- a non-corporate descent group whose members claim
descent from a common ancestor without knowing
the genealogical inks to that ancestor - often produced through fission of lineage into
newer, smaller lineage
44characteristics of the clan
- greater genealogical depth than lineage
- lacks residential unity (in contrast to lineage)
- a ceremonial unit that meets on special occasions
- handle important integrative functions
- may regulate marriage outside clan
45clans are often dependent on symbols as
integrative feature
- totem a symbol of a clans mythical origin that
reinforces clan members common descent - totem from Ojibwa ototeman he is a relative of
mine
46Phratries and Moieties
- less common forms of descent groups
- phratry a unilineal descent group composed of at
least two clans that supposedly share a common
ancestry, whether they do or not - if a society is broken into only two large groups
(clan or phratry), each group is referred to as a
MOIETY - moieties, phratries, clans and lineages
- from most inclusive to the least inclusive
- all typically associated with exogamy
47Bilateral Kindred
- a person's bilateral set of relatives who may be
called upon for some purpose - no two persons belong exactly to the same kin
group - ego centered with kindred of close relatives
spreading out on both your mother's and father's
sides - connected only because of you