Title: Polyandry
1KINSHIP- Functional Social Structure GROUP-BUILDIN
G DEVICE -(through) DESCENT -FAMILY UNIT OF
PRODUCTION (SURVIVAL/ECONOMICS) -MAINTENANCE
OF RESOURCES -LABOR POOL -SUPPORT AND
ASSISTANCE HOW IT WORKS GROUP BUILDING 1.
DESCENT SYSTEMS -UNILINEAL DESCENT -PATRILINE
AL MATRILINEAL -COGNATIC DESCENT 2.
RESIDENCE PATTERNS -NEW UNIT OF PRODUCTION 3.
TERMINOLOGY SYSTEMS -IDENTIFYING GROUP
MEMBERSHIP -INHERITANCE MARRIAGE (Yer kin)
2Kinship Defined
- Kinship refers to the
- relationships
- found in all societies
- that are based on blood
- or marriage
- Group-building /
- Problem-solving device
3KINSHIP- Functional Social Structure
- How does it organize societies?
- Arranges people (most structural form
through descent) - Reckons descent (vertical organization)
- Arranges marriages
- Distributes wealth
- Kinship relationships not just biological,
though
4(Not all societies utilize kinship in the same
way, though ie., in the US, ties and functions
of kinship are horizontal, not vertical, and not
as specific absolute)
5Extended Chinese families
6Descent (vertical) systems are particularly seen
where
- FAMILY UNIT OF PRODUCTION
- -Survival
- -Family-based economies
- -Important for
- -MAINTENANCE OF RESOURCES
- -LABOR POOL
- -SUPPORT AND ASSISTANCE
7With most descent groups..
- Which family youre a functional and economic
member of is pretty strictly defined - An organized system of
- Ownership
- Labor
- Assistance
- Inheritance
8Descent Groups
- Relatives who live their lives in close proximity
to one another. - Characteristics
- Have a strong sense of identity.
- Often share maintain communally held property.
- Structured work units.
- Provide economic other assistance to one
another. - Engage in mutual ceremonies.
- Mechanism for inheriting property and political
office. - Control behavior.
- Regulate marriages.
9Rules of Descent Two Types
- Unilineal
- Trace their ancestry through mothers line or
fathers line, but not both (60). - Cognatic descent
- Includes ambilineal descent and bilateral
descent, etc.
10Corporate Nature ofUnilineal Descent Groups
- Lineage members see themselves as members of the
group rather than individuals. - Large numbers of family must approve of
marriages. - Property is regulated by the group, rather than
by the individual. - If a member of a lineage assaults a member of
another lineage, the assaulter and the group are
held accountable. - The kinship group provides security and
protection for individual members.
11Unilineal Patrilineal Descent
- In a patrilineal descent system, a person is
connected to relatives of both sexes related
through males only.
12Patrilineal Descent
- Most common unilineal descent group.
- A man, his children, his brothers children, and
his sons children are all members of the same
descent group. - Females must marry outside their patrilineages.
- A womans children belong to the husbands
lineage rather than her own.
13Kinship Diagram Symbols (only so you can follow
along)
14Matrilineal Descent
- In a matrilineal descent system, a person is
connected to kin of both sexes related through
females only.
15Matrilineal Descent Groups
- A woman, her siblings, her children, her sisters
children, and her daughters children. - 15 of the unilineal descent groups found among
contemporary societies including - Native Americans (such as Navajo, Cherokee, and
Iroquois) - Truk and Trobrianders of the Pacific
- Bemba, Ashanti, and Yao of Africa
16Matrilineal Descent
- These Zuni of New Mexico practice matrilineal
descent.
17Matriarchy not the same
- The rule of domination of women over men.
18Differences Between Patrilineal and Matrilineal
Descent Groups
19Differences Between Patrilineal and Matrilineal
Descent Groups
20For comparison Cognatic Descent Groups
- A form of descent traced through both females and
males. - Approximately 40 of the worlds societies.
- Ambilineal descent
- Affiliates a person to a kin group through either
the male or the female line. - Bilateral descent
- Individuals equally emphasize their mothers kin
and their fathers kin.
212. Residence patterns
- Important because its Your NEW Unit of
Production - Functional kin unit (rather than biological)
- Matrilocal Residence
- Patrilocal Residence
- Neolocal Residence
- Andfor comparison
- Ambilocal Residence
- Bilocal, etc.
22Patrilocal Residence
23Rural Chinese Houses
24Rural Chinese Houses
Traditional rural houses. Baisha, Yunnan, China
25Matrilocal Residence
26Mens houses in New Guinea
New Guinea, Abelam. Decorated Mens
House.60-80ft. Mid 20th century. Anthony
Forge,1962.
Consistent themes in Abelam art are fertility,
masculine power, magic, and warrior proficiency.
All these themes are represented in their mens
houses.
27Mens houses in New Guinea
28Neolocal Residence
29Other (cognatic) residence patterns
- Andfor comparison
- Ambilocal Residence
- Bilocal, etc.
- An Ambilocal example
- The Potlatch . .
30Ambilocal Residence example NW Canada- Potlatch
Ceremony
313. Terminology Systems (Kinship Classification)
- Functional and psychological grouping
- and dividing
- Eskimo
- Hawaiian
- Iroquois
- Omaha
- Crow
- Sudanese
- - Also important for regulation of
marriage . .
32For example some common Kinship terms
- Fathers sister (FZ)
- Fathers sisters husband (FZH)
- Fathers brothers wife (FBW)
- Fathers brother (FB)
- Father (F)
- Mother (M)
- Mothers sisters husband (MZH)
- Mothers sister (MZ)
- Mothers brother (MB)
- Mothers brothers wife (MBW)
- Fathers sisters son (FZS)
- Fathers sisters daughter (FZD)
- Fathers brothers son (FBS)
33Iroquois kinship chart
34Cross-Cousin Marriage(. . . gets scary)
35Eskimo Kinship System
- 1/10th of the worlds societies -
Associated with bilateral descent.
36Hawaiian System
- Found in 1/3 of the societies in the world.
- Uses a single term for all relatives of the same
sex and generation - A persons father, fathers brother, and mothers
brother are all referred to as father. - In childrens generation, the only distinction is
based on sex - male cousins are as brothers,
female cousins as sisters. - Nuclear family members are roughly equivalent to
more distant kin.