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Families, Kinship, and Descent. Families Descent Kinship Calculation Kinship Terminology. 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.
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Families, Kinship, and Descent • Families • Descent • Kinship Calculation • Kinship Terminology
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
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
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
Industrialism and Family Organization • Neolocality – married couples may live hundreds of miles from parents • Most prevalent residence pattern in U.S. is family of procreation living neolocally.
Changes in North American Kinship • Nuclear families accounted for 23% of American households in 2003-2004 • Increasing representation of women in the work force associated with rise in marriage age from 21 years in 1970 to 25 in 2003 • Between 1970 and 2003 the number of divorced Americans rose from 4.3 million to 22 million • Number of single-parent families outstripped population growth, from fewer than 4 million in 1970 to 16 million in 2003
Changes in North American Kinship • Growing isolation from kin may well be unprecedented in human history • Major contrast with Brazilians, who much prefer to live in social world with relatives (less mobile society) • About 57% American women and 60% percent American men currently married in 2004
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.
Households by Type: Selected Years, 1970 to 2003 (percent distribution) • Sources: U.S. Census Bureau, Current Population Survey, March and Annual Social and Economic Supplements: 1997 to 2003; J. M. Fields, “America’s Families and Living Arrangements: 2003,” Current Population Reports, P20-553, November 2004. http://www.census.gove/prod/2004pubs/p20-553.pdf, p. 4.
Ratio of Divorces to Marriages per 1,000 U.S. Population, Selected Years, 1950-2003 • Source: U.S. Census Bureau, Statistical Abstract of the United States 2006, Tables 71, p. 64. http://www.census.gov/prod/www/statistical_abstract.html
Ratio of Divorces to Marriages per 1,000 U.S. Population, Selected Years, 1950-2003 • Source: J. M. Fields, “American Families and Living Arrangements: 2003,” Current Population Reports, P20-553, November 2004. http://www.census.gov/prod/2004pubs/p20-553.pdf, pp. 3-4. U.S. Census Bureau, Statistical Abstract of the United States, 2004-5; Statistics Canada, 2001 Census. http://www.statcan.co/english/Pgdb/famil53a.htm, http://www.statcan.co/english/Pgdb/famil40a.htm.
The Family among Foragers • Typically, band exists only seasonally, breaking up into nuclear families when subsistence means require (seasons of meager resources) • The two basic units of social organization among foragers are the nuclear family and the band
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
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 (e.g., Adam) (demonstrated descent; memorized, but not necessarily accurate, genealogies)
A Matrilineage Five Generations Deep • Matrilineages are based on demonstrated descent from a female ancestor. Only the children of the group’s women (blue) belong to the matrilineage. The children of the group’s men are excluded; they belong to their mother’s matrilineage.
A Patrilineage Five Generations Deep • Lineages are based on demonstrated descent from a common ancestor. With patrileneal descent, children of the group’s men (blue) are included as descent-group members. Children of the group’s female members are excluded; they belong to their father’s patrilineage. Also notice lineage exogamy.
Lineages, Clans, and Residence Rules • In many societies, descent groups are corporate, sharing resources and property • In tribal societies, descent group, not nuclear family, is fundamental unit
Unilineal Descent 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
Ambilineal Descent Rules • Membership is fluid • Membership achieved • Membership ascribed in unilineal descent • People can choose the descent group they want to belong to
Family versus Descent • Obligations to one may conflict with obligations to the other • More conflicts for men in matrilineal societies (descent continuity through own matriliny versus obligations to own wife/child • Compared to patrilineal systems, matrilineal societies tend to have higher divorce rates and greater female promiscuity • Many societies have both families and descent groups
Kinship Calculation • Kin terms – labels given in particular culture to different kinds of relatives (e.g., uncle) • Biological kin type – degree of actual genealogical relatedness (kinship notation, e.g., FB, MB) • 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 (kinship is culturally constructed)
Lineal Terminology • Native taxonomy developed over generations by the people who live in particular society • Our own system of kinship classification called lineal kinship terminology • Linealrelative – ancestor or descendant • Collateralrelatives – all other kin • Affinals – relatives by marriage
Bifurcate Merging Terminology • Associated with unilineal descent and unilocal residence • Splits mother’s side from father’s side, but also merges same-sex siblings of each parent
Generational Terminology • Uses same term for parents and their siblings, but lumping is more complete • Typical of ambilineal societies
Bifurcate collateral terminology • Separate terms used for each of the six kin types of the parental generation • Common to North Africa and the Middle East • Most particular system
The Distinctions among Lineals, Collaterals, and Affinals as Perceived by Ego
The Four Systems of Kinship Terminology, with Social and Economic Correlates