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FAMILIES & KINSHIP Variation in Family Form Matrifocal Nuclear Extended Patrifocal Karki Family - Matrifocal
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Page 1: Anth103 Kinship

FAMILIES & KINSHIP

Variation in Family Form✓Matrifocal✓Nuclear✓Extended✓Patrifocal

Karki Family - Matrifocal

Page 2: Anth103 Kinship

Families, Kinship, and Descent

Families Descent Kinship Calculation Kinship Terminology

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Families

Nuclear family – consists of a married couple and their children, normally living together in same household

Extended family – consists of three or more generations

• Understanding kinship system is essential part of anthropology

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Families

Family of orientation – family in which one is born and grows up

Family of procreation – formed when one marries and has children In most societies, relations with nuclear family

members take precedence over relations with other kin

Nuclear family widespread, but not universal

• Descent groups – lineages and clans

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Families

In many societies, extended families are primary unit of social organization Muslims of western Bosnia – nuclear families within

large extended families called zadrugas Nayars – matrilineal society in which extended

families live in compounds called tarawads

Where nuclear family is important, it is primary arena for sexual, reproductive, economic, and enculturative functions

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Industrialism and Family Organization

Neolocality – married couples may live hundreds of miles from parents

Extended family household – expanded family household that includes 3 or more generations

Within stratified nations, value systems and kinship vary from class to class

• Most prevalent residence pattern in U.S. is family of procreation living neolocally.

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Changes in Family and Household Organization in the United States: 1970 versus 2004

Sources: From U.S. Census data in J. M. Fields, “America’s Families and Living Arrangements: 2003,” Current Population Reports, P20-553, November 2004, http://www.census.gov/prod/2004pubs/p20-553.pdf, p. 4; J. M. Fields and L. M. Casper, “America’s Families and Living Arrangements: 2000,” Current Population Reports, P20-557.pdf; U.S. Census Bureau, Statistical Abstract of the United States, 2006, Tables 55, 56, and 65. http://www.census.gov/prod/www/statistical_abstract.html.

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Descent Groups

Patrilineal descent – individuals automatically join father’s descent group when they are born

Unilineal descent – descent rule only uses one line

• Matrilineal descent – individuals automatically join mother’s descent group when they are born

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Descent Groups

Clan – descent group who claims common descent from an apical ancestor but cannot demonstrate it (stipulated descent)

• Lineage – descent group who can demonstrate their common descent from apical ancestor

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Patrilineal Descent

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Matrilineal Descent

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Ambilineal Descent

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Bilateral Descent

Kin on both sides are important & recognized

Paining by John Holyfield (artist)

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Functions of Descent Groups (Clans & Lineages)

Regulate marriage Make economic

decisions Political functions Religious functions

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Lineages, Clans, and Residence Rules

Matrilocality – married couple lives with wife’s family; associated with matrilineal descent and less common than patrilocality

• Patrilocality – married couple lives with husband’s family; associated with patrilineal descent and more common than matrilocality

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Family versus Descent

Obligations to one may conflict with obligations to the other

Compared to patrilineal systems, matrilineal societies tend to have higher divorce rates and greater female promiscuity

• Many societies have both families and descent groups

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Kinship Calculation

Kin terms – labels given in particular culture to different kinds of relatives

Biological kin type – degree of actual genealogical relatedness

Bilateral kinship – people tend to perceive kin links through males and females as being similar or equal

• System by which people in a society reckon kin relationships

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Kinship Symbols and Genealogical Kin Type Notation