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Traditional MENA Social Structure. Social Ecology of Family Relations and Psychological Development. Traditional MENA Social Org. Tribal? Segmentary lineages? Social classes? Feudal?. Traditional MENA Social Org. Symbiosis: Pastoralism Agriculture City-based crafts & merchants
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Traditional MENA Social Structure Social Ecology of Family Relations and Psychological Development
Traditional MENA Social Org • Tribal? • Segmentary lineages? • Social classes? • Feudal?
Traditional MENA Social Org Symbiosis: • Pastoralism • Agriculture • City-based crafts & merchants + rulers & religious scholars
Tribal Society? • Self-governing groups • Beyond reach of government • “Submit” to government & pay “tax” • Nomadic pastoralists – “bedouin” • Herd camels, sheep, goats • Have “client” groups of farmers & craftsmen • Transhumants • Agriculturalists
Tribes in Arab-Muslim Societies • Struggle between tribes and states • Still in Pakistan & Afghanistan • Contrast of urban & rural ways of life • Ibn Khaldun: “civilization” vs. “solidarity” • Raiding and feuding • Every man a warrior • Culture celebrating heroic deeds • Tribesmen migrated into cities
Tribal Social Organization • “segmentary lineage system” • E. E. Evans-Pritchard, The Nuer, 1930s • Lineage: group of families descended from common ancestor • Patrilineage: traced through male line • Matrilineage: traced through female line we have bilateral kindred system
Segmentary Lineage System • Nuclear families nested within extended • Extended families nested within lineages • genealogical links sometimes traceable • Lineages nested within clans • genealogical links not traceable • Clans nested within tribe or tribal “fractions”
Segmentary Lineage System • “Clan” • Lineage • Extended family • Nuclear family
Evans-Pritchard Thesis Shifting balance of feuding and fusing segments Order and stability without government
Segmentary Lineages • Mental map of social structure • Ideology -- often distorts real relationships • Map & ideology: sketches potential relationships people can build, and claims they can make on each other
Segmentary Lineages • Model only approximated • Not all kinsmen included • Some / many non-kin included: patron-client networks • Ties deliberately built across kin groups
Segmentary Lineages 5. Model more likely actualized in absence of gov’t control “If there’s a crisis, you’ll see the lineages emerge.” • re-created by militia groups & in chaos: Lebanese, Algerian, Iraqi civil wars; Afghanistan, Libya? • can appear “tribal”
Marriages Arranged • Many pre-industrial societies arrange marriages (Especially agricultural Eurasia: Europe, MENA, India, China) • Marriage is relationship between families, not necessarily two young people in love • Most lineage-based societies practice lineage / clan exogamy
Marriage Rules: Exogamy • Levi-Strauss: Men exchange & circulate women Builds solidarity among lineages / clans • Cross-cousin (MBD or FSD) preferred or required; parallel cousin prohibited & viewed as “incest”
Kinship Diagrams married male female children siblings
Exogamous M.B.D. Marriage B M ego D Cross-cousins
Endogamous F.B.D. Marriage ? B ? F ? ego D Parallel cousins
Marriage Rules: MENA • “Close marriage” -- endogamous parallel cousin (FBD) preferred but not majority of marriages cross-cousin (MDB) O.K. 2nd or 3rd cousins O.K. • Patrilineal families / households also look matrilineal from the inside
Patriliny and Matriliny ? B ? F ? ego D Parallel cousins
Arranged Marriages • Traditionally: marriages arranged to create or cement relationships between families • Girls (and boys) may be forced to marry strangers or people they dislike • Men usually 5 – 10 years older Girls often 14 to 17
Effects of Endogamy • Weaker cross-kin segment bonds? • Strengthens within-kin segment bonds greater fission & feuding? • Creates matrilineal kinship network within patrilineal strengthens hsld women’s solidarity?
Traditional Marriage Strategies • Marry up in wealth & status • Marry close – conserve property & status • Endogamous parallel cousin FBD preferred • Children may prefer these • Alliance marriages: link distant families • Result: officially patrilineal, but matrifocal
Traditional Marriage Strategies • Father / patriarch may choose and has final say • Mother acts as family agent & scouts behind scenes • May consult with son or daughter • Kids may prefer cousins or kin they know • High status & wealthy families follow rules more closely
What of romantic love? • Recognized & celebrated in tragic literature and folktales • Seen as fickle, undependable • Different from love that grows from years of marriage • “heart” love vs. “liver” love
Divorce • Frequent in many areas • Failure to have child within 2 years • Mistreatment by husband or in-laws • Women “leave” inheritance with brothers, in case she’s divorced • 2nd marriages less formal; woman may have greater say
Family / Kin group:“Patronymic Association” • “People of…” • “Descendents of…” • “House of…” big extended family little lineage
Patronymic Association • Basic unit of traditional social organization • pastoralist camping group • adjoining households in village • neighborhood or alley in urban quarter • Lineage-like, but… • Does NOT include many families & members • DOES include “clients” treated as if family • Fuzzy, fluid, & shifting boundaries
Patronymic Association • Kin terms, etiquettes, and feelings extended to non-kin patrons and clients • Family-kin relationships not fixed by genealogy, but negotiated – as if patron-client relationships • Key to traditional MENA social org: networks of face-to-face kin-based and kin-like patron-client relationships
Patron-Client Relations • Reciprocity system: • gift & counter-gift – shifting imbalance maintains mutual indebtedness • Family / kin idiom & etiquettes: • Patron – like father or uncle -- dominates, protects & may promote • Client – like son or nephew – subordinates self, receives protection, maybe promotion
Patron-Client Relations • Exchanges of gifts & favors: Traditional reciprocity system? or: Corruption?
MENA Social Organization • Segmentary – but not lineages (Magritte’s pipe !) • Family-based – but not just nuclear (or even extended) families: patronymic association • Strategy -- build strong entourage of kin & clients • Family gender & age hierarchy extended to patron-client relations