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Cultural Anthropology

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Title: Cultural Anthropology


1
Cultural Anthropology
  • by Nancy Bonvillain Chapter 9
  • Marriage and Family

2
  • Kinship systems and family arrangements are
    basic elements in all societies (Bonvillain
    2006222).
  • 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 2006222).

3
  • A useful starting definition of family is one
    given by anthropologist Kathleen Gough (197552).
    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 2006223).

4
  • All societies contain units recognized as
    families, but there are differences in the ways
    in which families are formed Bonvillain
    2006223).
  • There is some debate in the field about whether
    marriage and the family are universal constructs
    Bonvillain 2006224).

5
  • 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.

6
  • 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

7
  • Anthropologists as Expert Witnesses
  • How are anthropologists different from
    psychologists?

8
  • Joint family- family consisting of siblings with
    their spouses and children, sharing work and
    resources.

9
  • 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 2006229).

10
  • 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)

11
  • 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
    husbands brother and in which the children
    ensuing from the second marriage are said to be
    the children of the first, dead husband.

12
  • Same-sex marriage
  • Bridewealth presents given by the husbands
    family to the wifes 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 wifes parents
  • Dowry gifts given by the wifes family to the
    married couple or to the husbands kin before,
    during or after the wedding ceremony

13
  • 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 wifes family

14
  • Uxorilocal living with or near the wifes
    parents
  • Patrilocal residence pattern of residence after
    marriage in which the couple lives with or near
    the husbands relatives
  • Virilocal living with or near the husbands
    parents
  • Avunculocal residence patterns of residence
    after marriage in which the couple lives with or
    near the husbands mothers brother

15
  • Bilocal residence patterns of residence after
    marriage in which the couple alternates between
    living with the wifes kin and the husbands 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

16
  • Levirate marriage preference rule in which a
    widow marries her decreased husbands brother
  • Sororate marriage between a widower and his
    decreased wifes sister
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