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Kinship

Quiz yourself by thinking what should be in each of the black spaces below before clicking on it to display the answer.
        Help!  

Question
Answer
relatives by marriage; in-laws   affinal  
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form of bilateral descent; individual may choose to affiliate w/either father’s/mother’s descent group   ambilineal descent  
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principle of classifying kin under which different kinship terms are used for mother’s side of family & father’s side of family   bifurcation  
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system of descent under which individuals are equally affiliated w/&mothers’ & fathers’ descent group   bilateral descent  
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unilineal kinship group whose members believe themselves to be descended from a common ancestor but who cannot trace this link through known relatives   clan  
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any nonunilineal system of descent   cognatic descent  
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kin descended from common ancestor; not in direct ascendant/descendant line, such as siblings & cousins   collateral kin  
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political structure in which higher-order units form alliances that emerge only when lower-order units come into conflict   complementary opposition  
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relatives by blood; people related to Ego by blood are distinguished from similar relations by marriage   consanguineal relatives  
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blood ties between people   consanguinity  
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permanent kinship groups that have an existence beyond the membership at any given time   corporate descent groups  
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children of a parent’s siblings of opposite sex (mother’s brothers, father’s sisters)   cross cousins  
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culturally established affiliation between a child and one or both parents   descent  
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group of kin who are descendants of a common ancestor, extending beyond two generations   descent group  
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tracing of descent through both matrilineal & patrilineal links, each of which is used for different purposes   double descent  
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rule specifying that a person must marry outside a particular group   exogamy  
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biological father   genitor  
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transfer of property between generations   inheritance  
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unique kin network made up of all people related to a specific individual in bilateral kinship system   kindred  
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culturally defined relationship established on the basis of blood ties or through marriage   kinship  
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totality of kin relations, kin groups, & terms for classifying kin in a society; embedded in economic systems   kinship system  
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words used to identify different categories of kin in a particular culture   kinship terminology  
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group of kin whose members trace descent from a known common ancestor   lineage  
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blood relations linked through descent, such as Ego, Ego’s mother, Ego’s grandmother, and Ego’s daughter   lineal kin  
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lineage formed by descent in the female line   matrilineage  
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rule that affiliates a person to kin of both sexes related through females only   matrilineal descent  
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granting of privilege or favoritism on the basis of family relationships   nepotism  
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any system of descent in which both father’s & mother’s lineages have equal claim to individual   nonunilineal descent  
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children of a parent’s same-sex siblings (mother’s sisters, father’s brothers)   parallel cousins  
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socially designated father of a child, who may or may not be the biological father   pater  
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lineage formed by descent in the male line   patrilineage  
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rule that affiliates a person to kin of both sexes related through males only   patrilineal descent  
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unilineal descent group composed of number of clans whose members feel themselves to be closely related   phratry  
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form of sociopolitical organization in which multiple descent groups (usually patrilineages) form at different levels & function in different contexts   segmentary lineage system  
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transfer of office or social position between generations   succession  
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animal, plant/other aspect of natural world held to be ancestral/to have other intimate relationships w/members of a group   totem  
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immigrants who maintain close relations with their home countries   transmigrant  
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pattern of close ties and frequent visits by immigrants to their home countries   transnationalism  
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descent group membership based on links through either maternal/paternal line, but not both   unilineal descent  
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most Americans understand ourselves & each other as __ first & __ __ second   individuals; family members  
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relationships between individuals are governed mainly by   kinship norms  
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is main way of allying groups to one another & incorporating strangers into a group   extension of kinship ties  
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kinship is central in determining people's __ & __   rights; responsibilities  
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work, citizenship, & common economic & political interests are other principles of __ __ in Western society   social organization  
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kin group & social institution in Western societies; inheritance of property is mainly along kinship lines   nuclear family  
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in every society formation of __ & regulation of __ depend to some extent on socially recognized ties of kinship   groups; behavior  
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kinship systems link people in a web of rights & __   obligations  
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kinship systems rest on __ defined __ relationships   culturally; biological  
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ways in which society classifies kin are   cultural  
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ways in which society classifies kin may/may not reflect __ __ assessment of biological ties   scientifically accurate  
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biological paternity is irrelevant; fatherhood established by performance of ritual; social fatherhood is what counts   Toda of India  
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culturally defined __ __ __ have 2 basic functions   ties of kinship  
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kinship provides __ between generations   continuity  
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kinship unit is fundamentally responsible for __ & __ of children   care; education  
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kinship unit is fundamentally responsible orderly __ __ __ & social position between generations   transmission of property  
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kinship defines a __ __ __ on whom a person can depend on for aid   universe of others  
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fact the expanded kin groups are found in so many human societies shows the __ of social groups larger than the __ __   adaptiveness; nuclear family  
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descent is an important basis of __ __ __   social groups formation  
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descent group applies to __ __ who are lineal descendants of a __ __ extending beyond 2 generations   consanguineal kin; common ancestor  
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where descent groups are found they have important functions in organization of   domestic life  
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where descent groups are found they have important functions in __ of children   enculturation  
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where descent groups are found they have important functions in use & transfer of __, __ & __ offices   property; political; ritual  
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where descent groups are found they have important functions in __ of disputes   settlement  
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where descent groups are found they have important functions in __ organization & __   political; warfare  
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2 basic types of descent rules that operate in society are   unilineal & bilateral descent  
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2 types of unilineal descent rules are   patrilineal & matrilineal descent  
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bilateral descent is used for basis of reckoning descent & establishing __ & __ of kinship   rights; obligations  
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major distinction of systems of bilateral & unilineal descent is that __ __ __ do not overlap   unilineal kinship systems  
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father's brother's children would be your cousins & therefore members of your kin in   American bilateral kinship system  
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father's brother's children would be kin to you but not to their mother's family   patrilineal kinship system  
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if all families had same number of children more people would be in a __ system than in a __ system   bilateral; unilateral  
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people in a __ system are bound more tightly to each other because there is no __ of kinship   unilateral; overlap  
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most societies throughout the world have a __ kinship   unilineal  
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bilateral kinship is a common practice in __ cultures   Western  
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because unilineal descent groups do not overlap this system provides __ group membership for everyone in the society   unambiguous  
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where descent is traced through only one line, group membership is __ & __ defined   easily; clearly  
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people can be sure of their right of ownership, social duties, & social roles as well as relate to large numbers of known/unknown people in society by knowing __ __ of others & to which they below   descent group  
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descent groups can perpetuate themselves over time even though their membership changes because   unilineal group membership is unambiguous  
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old members die & new one admitted through birth, but integrity of __ group persists   corporate  
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unilineal descent share certain __ __ throughout the world, but do not operate __ the same in every society   basic similarities; exactly  
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are basically means by which society relates to its environment & circumstances   system of descent & kinship  
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actual behavior in any society does not correspond exactly to rules as they are defined in   kinship ideology  
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as environment & circumstances change rules of kinship are bent & manipulated so that a group   may be successful  
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accepted departures from norms existing in every society give unilineal systems a __ they would otherwise lack, which is necessary for human __   flexibility; adaptation  
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common economic & historical interests cause people to join together & define themselves as a __ __ justified by kin relations   collective entity  
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kinship ideologies can be manipulated & negotiated to   fit new realities  
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lineages may vary in __ __ from three generation upward   time depth  
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lineages are considered corporate group where land is owned __ & where members are held __ for one another's __   collectively; responsible; behavior  
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__ lineages may for clans   related  
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common __ __ may be mythological figures, or where no specific ancestor is known/named   clan ancestor  
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lineage is often __ __ or __ __ whose members cooperate on a daily basis   local residential; domestic group  
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clans are generally not __ units but tend to __ __ over many villages   residential; spread out  
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clans often have __ & __ functions rather than primarily __ & __ ones   political; religious; domestic; economic  
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one of most important functions of clan is to   regulate marriage  
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clans are __ by a rule of exogamy   governed  
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__ __ __ within the clan strengthens it unilineal character   prohibition against marriage  
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if person marries __ __ __, his/her children would find difficult to make sharp distinctions between maternal & paternal relatives   within the clan  
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wrote of Crow Indians of N America; clans are very important & case of marriage within clan person would not know how to act towards others & they to act towards him/her   Robert H Lowie  
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also extends network of peaceful & social relations within society as different clans are allied through marriage   clan exogamy  
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man, his sisters & brothers, his brother's children (not his sister's), his own children, & his son's children all belong to same group; inheritance & succession to office moves from father to son   patrilineal descent groups  
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pastoral people of Sudan E Africa; patrilineal society; all rights, privileges, obligations, & interpersonal relationships regulated by kinship; father, his brothers, & their children are closet kin   Nuer  
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most significant fact of life for Nuer; confers rights to land, requires participation in certain religious ceremonies, & determines political & judicial obligations, as making alliances in feuds/warfare   membership in patrilineal descent group  
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in absence of a centralized system of political control, in Nuer societies, kinship based __ are important mechanism of government   alliances  
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Nuer believe kin should not __ with one another, __ within lineage/clan tend to be kept small & __ rapidly   fight; disputes; settled  
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because all who are not in some way kin are __, in Nuer society, attack on one lineage segment may cause all members of a clan to coalesce against a(n) __ __   enemies; common enemy  
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segmentary lineage system has important __ implications for Nuer & helps __ their tribal-level society   political; integrate  
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Nuer are divided in to 20 clans, further divided by   lineages  
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below level of clan, in Nuer society, are segments called   maximal lineages  
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maximal lineages are broken down into __ __ spread over many villages   major lineages  
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major lineages are subdivided into __ lineages, which in turn are made up of __ lineages   minor; minimal  
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contains 3-5 generations & is basic descent group that functions in day-to-day activities of Nuer society; live in same village & regard one another as close relatives   minimal lineage  
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minimal lineage, of Nuer, are politically __ & there is not formal or centralized __ above this level   independent; leadership  
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are called upon to function mainly in context of conflict in Nuer society   higher-order lineages  
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Nuer clans nor lineages have any corporate life & their members do not live together; coming together of members of clans/lineages occurs when lower-order segments come into conflict   Evans-Pritchard  
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serious dispute between members of different __ lineages, ___ lineage members take side of nearest kin in Nuer society   lower-order; higher-order  
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Nuer clans & lineages function as contingent __ __ rather than formal parts of political structure   alliance networks  
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particularly functional when stronger tribes want to expand to nearby territories held by weaker tribes   segmentary lineage systems  
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complementary opposition direct energies of society __, away from __ between kin, to an __ enemy   upward; competition; outside  
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degree to women are incorporated into __ of her husband & degree of __ she has varies in different societies   patrilineage; autonomy  
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a woman may retain __ __ __ in her father's lineage, under patrilineal societies   right of inheritance  
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under patrilineal societies, great care taken to guarantee husband's rights & control over his wife/children because __ of descent group depends on this   continuity  
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patrilineal systems most often have __ rules of residence, so wife may find herself living among __, tending to undermine female __ & __   patrilocal; strangers; solidarity; support  
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analysis of families in Arab world; issues of honor/shame; generalizations gloss over many conflicts, doubts, & arguments of life as it is really lived   Abu-Lughod ethnography  
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in Arab families, women often portrayed in terms of partilineality, polygyny, & patrilateral parallel-cousin marriage   ideal kinship patterns  
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in Arab families __ revolves around male's ability to protect sexuality of women in his family   honor  
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challenges static pictures of authoritarian patriarchy by analyzing story of Bedouin women who rebel against norms of their society in small & sometimes effective ways   Lila Abu-Lughod  
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social __ & cultural __ are closely intertwined   institutions; ideologies  
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basic to interrelationships of social institutions & cultural ideologies, including access to production, wealth & property   economic systems  
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there are no cultures in which people __ as they are supposed to, as the __ to them to   behave; rules  
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as economic systems __, people's actual behavior tends to depart more frequently from the rules   change  
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two fundamental ties recognized in every society are that between   women & their children and siblings  
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most important position is that of mother's brother; man gains sexual & economic rights over woman when he marries, but does not gain rights to children; many rights belong to woman's brother   matrilineal societies  
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consists of woman, her brothers & sisters, her sister's (but not brother's) children, her own children, & children of daughters (but not son's)   membership of matrilineal descent group  
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tend to be correlated w/matrilocal rule of residence; man goes to live with/near wife's kin after marriage; husband plays far less important role in household; marriages tend to be less stable   matrilineal systems  
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possible for matrilineally organized group to do away w/presence of husbands & father altogether, as long as there are brothers who assume responsibilities   Nayar of India  
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matrilineal figure of authority & respect; children of man's sister, rather than his own, are his heirs & successors   mother's brother  
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matrilineal society, relationship between man & his son is likely to be affectionate & loving because it is   free of problems of authority & control  
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occur in only 5% of world's cultures   double descent system  
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have system of double descent; daily domestic life strongest among patrilineal related kinsmen, jointly control farms & plots of land, patriclan is source of rights over farmland & forest products   Yako of Nigeria  
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one obligation is to provide food at funerals; arbitration of disputes lies in hands of senior members   patriclan  
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Yako membership in men's associations & rights to fruit trees are inherited through the   male line  
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Yako, cooperation in ritual & succession to some religious offices are derived from   patriclan membership  
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matrilineal __ & clan __ are important in Yako society   bonds; membership  
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rights & obligations of mother's brother/sons & authority of priest of matrilineal clan based on mystical ideas regarding perpetuation & tranquility in Yako World   practical assistance to matrilineal kin  
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fertility of crops, beasts, & humans, & peace between individuals & within community associated with & passed on through women   Yako belief  
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Yako matrilineage held together by __ __ of common fertility   mystical bonds  
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violence between matrilineal members of Yako are considered   sinful  
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Yako's mystical bonds mystical bonds of common fertility are reinforced in cult of __ __ whose priests are ritually given qualities of women   matriclan spirits  
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Yako, transfer of __ __, but no land, belong to matrilineal kinship group   accumulated wealth  
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Yako members of matriclans supervise __ & arrange for disposal of personal property of __   funerals; dead  
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all Yako currency & livestock pass to __ __ who also receive greater share of tolls, weapons & household goods   matrilineal relatives  
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Yako movable property of women pass to   daughters  
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Yako matriclans responsible for __ of kin   debts  
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Yako matriclans responsible for __ to one another at reasonable rates   loans  
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Yako matriclans responsible for providing part of __ transferred at marriage of sister's son   bridewealth  
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each contains different qualities from which flow rights, obligations, & benefits, both practical/spiritual, that bind Yako to one another & ensure continuity of the society   paternity & maternity  
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40% of world's societies structured around kinship systems that are   nonunilineal, or cognatic  
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nonunilineal/cognatic systems are further divided into __ & __ descent   bilateral; ambilineal  
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individual considered related equally to other kin through both mother's/father's side   bilateral descent system  
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individual formally affiliated w/large number of relations extended lineally through time but only on one side of family   unilineal kinship system  
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appear to be particularly adaptive in societies in which mobility & independence are important; basic to Western culture incl. US & predominate among foraging societies   bilateral kinship systems  
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people linked by __ __ networks are called kindred   bilateral kin  
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kindred is not a group, rather network of relations w/single group of __ at center   siblings  
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kindred are actually __ __ of kin, rather than social groups; more difficult to organize as cooperative __ __   overlapping categories; kin-based collectives  
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because a kindred is not a group but rather a(n) __ network, it cannot own land or have continuity over time   ego-centered  
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in an ambilineal system, individuals may choose to affiliate with either their mother's/father's descent group, but   not both  
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ambilineal descent is found in many __ __ societies   Pacific Island  
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at marriage, in Pacific Island societies, new couple chooses to live & identify with   either spouse's descent group  
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choice of descent group association, in Pacific Island societies, usually depends upon   access to land  
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friendship & politics also play important role in __ __ new couple chooses to live & identify with in Pacific Island society   descent group  
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total system of kinship terms & rules for using these terms   kinship classification system  
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kinship systems vary in degree to which they have different kinship terms for   different kinship relatives  
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ways in which kin are __ are associated with roles they play in society   classified  
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kinship terms refer to __ __, actual behavior is modified by individual personality differences & special circumstances   behavioral expectations  
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one of most important regulators of behaviors in most societies, outlining each person's rights/obligations & specifying ways in which person must act towards others & they towards him/her   kinship classification  
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kinship __ __ also related to types of social groups formed, systems of marriage/inheritance, & even deeper or broader cultural values   classification systems  
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husband's elder brother in North Indian societies   jait  
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husband's elder brother's wife in North Indian societies   jaitani  
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husband's younger brother in North Indian societies   deva  
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husband's younger brother's wife in North Indian societies   devrani  
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must be treated w/deference, touching their feet when meeting them, & refraining from using first names in North Indian society   jait & jaitani  
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may be treated w/friendly informality in North Indian society   deva & devrani  
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there are 45 kinship terms in   North India  
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there are 22 kinship terms in   US  
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distinguishes several kinds of kin reflecting greater inflexibility in behavior toward kin   N Indian Kinship classification system  
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many of N Indian __ __ underlying kinship terminology based on importance of __, __ extended family   cultural patterns; patrilineal; patrilocal  
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in North Indian society family of bride has __ __ than that of the groom   lower status  
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in North Indian society obligations of __ __ towards parents, including specific ritual obligations of eldest   male child  
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cultural patterns in North Indian society based on   hierarchy & importance of group  
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values of __, __ & __ __ expressed in N American kinship terminology   equality; individualism; nuclear family  
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aspect of hierarchy, critical to Indian kinship system   principle of relative age  
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father's elder brother in North Indian society   tau  
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father's younger brother in North Indian society   chacha  
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father's elder brother's wife in North Indian society   tai  
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father's younger brother's wife in North Indian society   chachi  
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still common for many N Indian women to __ __ __ if not their faces in presence of both father-in-law & husband's elder brother   cover their hair  
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Indian differentiation of kin according to whether from mother's side or father's side of family   bifurcation  
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grandparent's on father's side in North Indian society   dadi & dada  
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grandparent's on mother's side in North Indian society   nani & nana  
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man's wife's brother in North Indian society   sala  
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man's sister's husband   jija  
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in India man's sister's husband is in __ __ relative to him than his wife's brother   higher position  
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functions in guiding behavior are resisted & manipulated in response to pragmatic interest, social circumstances & emotion   structure relationships between kin in N India  
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in N India contesting claims over family property may lead to alliances within family that contrast with cultural rules about   seniority & patriarchal power  
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illness of some Indian family members may also direct flow of resources in directions not covered, & even in opposition to, kinship rules   governing reciprocity  
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has altered realities of kinship relations among many immigrant communities   global migration  
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study of kinship systems goes to __ point of anthropology   fundamental  
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kinship systems use the __ __ __, but they are social systems, not biological ones   metaphor of biology  
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societies differ in the __ of relatives they distinguish and the __ by which kin are classified   categories; principles  
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position of individual from whose perspective the kinship system is seen   Ego  
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distinguishes ascending & descending generation from Ego   generation principle  
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kinship system that has different kinship terms for relatives that are older than oneself & relatives younger   relative age principle  
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English kinship terminology does not recognize the __ __ principle   relative age  
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collateral kin are descended from a common ancestor with Ego but are not __ ascendants or descendants   direct  
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in collateral kinship Ego may refer to both his father & father's brother as   father  
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in collateral kinship Ego may refer to both his mother & her sisters as   mother  
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kinship system that has different kin terms for people of different genders   principle of gender  
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English word uncle does not distinguish between __ & __ relationships   consanguineal; affinal  
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societies which distinguish collateral relatives the __ __ __ relative may be important in kinship terminology   sex of linking  
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individual, related to you consanguineally   linking relative  
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when sex of your parent & linking relative are the __ the children who you are linked are parallel cousins   same  
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generation, relative age, lineality vs. collaterality, gender, consanguineal vs affinal kin, side of family, & sex of linking relative   7 different system of kinship  
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7 different system of kinship w/names of Native American groups, 1st described in 19th century   Lewis Henry Morgan  
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found in Polynesia; uses fewest kinship terms; emphasize distinction between generations & reflects equality between mother's/father's side of family in relation to Ego   Hawaiian  
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Hawaiian, all relatives of same __ & __ are referred to by same kinship term   generation; sex  
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Hawaiian male/female kin in __ __ distinguished in terminology, but in terms for sister & brother are same for children of one's parent's siblings   Ego's generation  
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correlated w/bilateral descent; emphasizes nuclear family by using terms for members that are not used for any other kin   Eskimo  
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singles out biologically closest group of relations & treats more distant kin more/less equally   Eskimo system  
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associated w/matrilineal or double descent & emphasizes importance of unilineal descent groups   Iroquois  
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found among patrilineal people; merging of generations on mother's side but not father's side; generational differences important on father's side ascending generation may have some authority over Ego; mother's patrilineage unimportant to Ego   Omaha  
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matrilineal equivalent to Omaha; relations on male side lumped together whereas generational differences are recognized in mother's matrilineal group   Crow  
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overriding importance of unilineality leads to subordination of other principles of classifying kin, such as relative age or generation   Crow & Omaha  
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since no __ __ group used Morgan's final kinship system he named it Sudanese   North American  
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African groups primarily in Ethiopia; also some places in Turkey & ancient Rome; most descriptive terminology system; different terms for every relative; groups tend to be strongly patrilineal & concerned w/issues of wealth, class & political power   Sudanese  
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kinship classification systems are part of the __ of a kinship system   totality  
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each type of classification emphasizes most important kinship __ & __ in societies that use it   groupings; relationships  
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found in unilineal societies emphasize importance of lineage & clan   Iroquois, Omaha, & Crow  
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emphasize partilineality, primogeniture, seniority, Confucian ethics & patriarchal authority & control   rules of kinship in Asian villages  
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eldest son inherits all father's property   primogeniture  
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stresses filial piety   Confucian ethics  
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obligation of sons to their fathers   filial piety  
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studies by Soo Ho Choi; eldest son gets lion's share of family property in return for care of elderly parents & worship them as ancestors after death   Pine Tree, Korea  
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contributing to marriages, education, & living expenses of his younger siblings   compassionate generosity  
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rice-growing society in W Sumatra Indonesia; one of few matrilineal Islamic societies in S Asia   Minangkabu  
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Minangkabu women wield significant informal power in their families & matrilineages   Evelyn Blackwood  
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central site of Minangkabu social relations, containing extended family of 3-4 generations   "big house" or "matrihouse"  
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central house post identified w/senior woman who is called   "the central pillar of the big house"  
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