Cultural Anthropology
Download
Report
Transcript Cultural Anthropology
Cultural Anthropology
by Nancy Bonvillain Chapter 9
Marriage and Family
“Kinship systems and family
arrangements are basic elements in all
societies (Bonvillain 2006:222).”
“Anthropologists tend to make a
distinction between family and
household, although people often use the
two words interchangeably. A household
refers to a group of people occupying a
common dwelling… As you read in
Chapter 8, members of families are
related either through descent
(consanguines) or marriage (affines)
Bonvillain 2006:222).”
“A useful starting definition of family is
one given by anthropologist Kathleen
Gough (1975:52). She defines the family
as a “married couple or other group of
adult kinfolk who co-operate
economically and in the upbringing of
children, and all or most of whom share a
common dwelling Bonvillain 2006:223).”
“All societies contain units recognized as
families, but there are differences in the
ways in which families are formed
Bonvillain 2006:223).”
“There is some debate in the field about
whether marriage and the family are
universal constructs Bonvillain
2006:224).”
Patrilineal- descent and inheritance
traced through men
Matrilineal- descent and inheritance
traced through women
Social fatherhood- may or maynot be the
same as biological paternity… man who
fulfills the responsibilities of parenting,
just as stepparents and adoptive parents
are social parents.
Nuclear family- consists of one or more
parents and their children, although
another relative, such as a grandparents
or an unmarried sibling of one of the
parents, may reside in the household for
a time
Single-parent families
Extended families consist of 3 or more
generations of people, for example,
parents, children, and grandparents
“Anthropologists as Expert Witnesses”
How are anthropologists different from
psychologists?
Joint family- family consisting of siblings
with their spouses and children, sharing
work and resources.
“Many anthropologists favor understanding the incest
taboo as a means of ensuring survival by forcing people to
make alliances with others outside the nuclear family.
This “marry out or die out” theory emphasizes that
marriage within a small unit will lead over time to the
isolation and genetic homogeneity of the group, which
makes it more vulnerable to population loss or even
extinction.
Mating outside the nuclear family reduces this risk and
also leads to the formation of social alliances and bonds of
reciprocity with other people. Bonvillain 2006:229).”
Class = social group usu. Determined on
the basis of a combination of birth and
achievement
Caste = social grouping whose
membership is determined at birth and is
generally inflexible
Monogamy = two people in a marriage
Polygamy = three or more people in a
marriage
Serial monogamy = two or more spouses
in a lifetime (but no at the same time)
Polygny = marriage between man and 2 or more women
Polyandry = marriage between woman and 2 or more men
Sororal polygyny = marriage between a man and two or
more women who are sisters
Ghost marriage = marriage practice among the Nuer of
Sudan in which a widow marries her dead husband’s
brother and in which the children ensuing from the
second marriage are said to be the children of the first,
dead husband.
Same-sex marriage
Bridewealth = presents given by the
husband’s family to the wife’s kin before,
during, or after wedding ceremony
Brideservice = a period of months or
years before or after marriage during
which the husband performs labor for his
wife’s parents
Dowry = gifts given by the wife’s family
to the married couple or to the husband’s
kin before, during or after the wedding
ceremony
Arranged marriage = marriages that are arranged
by the parents or other relatives of the bride
and groom
Courtship = period prior to marriage when a
couple tests attraction to and compatibility with
each other
Residence rules = rules that stipulate where a
couple will reside after their marriage
Matrilocal residence = pattern for residence
after marriage in which the couple lives with or
near the wife’s family
Uxorilocal = living with or near the wife’s
parents
Patrilocal residence = pattern of
residence after marriage in which the
couple lives with or near the husband’s
relatives
Virilocal = living with or near the
husband’s parents
Avunculocal residence = patterns of
residence after marriage in which the
couple lives with or near the husband’s
mother’s brother
Bilocal residence = patterns of residence after
marriage in which the couple alternates
between living with the wife’s kin and the
husband’s kin
Neolocal residence = pattern of residence after
marriage in which the couple establishes a new,
independent household separate from their
relatives
Internal warfare = warfare between closely
situated villages or communities
External warfare = warfare that takes place at
some distance from home communities,
regarding warriors’ absence from their homes
for extended periods of time
Levirate = marriage preference rule in
which a widow marries her decreased
husband’s brother
Sororate = marriage between a widower
and his decreased wife’s sister