Cultural Anthropology Chapter 10; Kinship and Descent
What percentage of the population practices matrilocal residence?
13%
Matrilineal descent makes __ percent of unilineal descent found among contemporary societies
15
What percentage of the population practices avunculocal residence?
4%
Multilineal descent groups make up __ percent of the world's kinship systems
40%
in 2011, Facebook found that 69 million users were connected by _ degrees of separation
5
Double descent is practiced by _ percent of the world's societies
5%
Neolocal residence is practiced by _ percent of the world's population
5%
What percentage of the population practices neolocal residence?
5%
What percent of all systems based on the unilineal principle are clear-cut and unambiguous (by birth)
60%
What percentage of the population practices patrilocal residence?
69%
Patrilineal descent makes up what percent of unilineal descent groups?
85%
What percentage of the population practices ambilocal residence?
9%
In Kinship diagrams, a shaded in circle or square is
EGO
What are the six types of primary kinship systems based on how a society distinguishes different categories of relatives?
Eskimo, Hawaiian, Iroquois, Omaha, Crow, and Sudanese
a kinship system associated with unilineal descent in which the father and father's brother are called by the same term, as are the mother and the mother's sister
Iroquois system
Geographical distribution of matrilineal descent
SE Africa, Ashanti, Trobiand Islands
kinship ties formed through marriage (that is, in-laws)
affinal relatives
small scale societies have kinship relations that are
all encompassing
a form of descent in which a person chooses to affiliate with a kin group through either the male or the female line
ambilineal descent
a residence pattern in which a married couple may choose to live with either the relatives of the wide or the relatives of the husband
ambilocal (bilocal) residence
a residence pattern in which a married couple lives with or near the husband's mother's brother (great-uncle)
avunculocal residence
The USA has a descent system of
bilateral
a type of kinship system in which individuals emphasize both their mother's kin and their father's kin relatively equally
bilateral descent
Most societies recognize some type of fictive kinship, whereby kinship terms and obligations are applied to people who have no
biological connection
The male child's authority in patrilineal descent is
biological father
In Kinship diagrams, the female symbol is a
circle
unilineal descent groups, usually comprising ten or more generations, consisting of members who claim a common ancestry even though they cannon trace step by step their exact connection to that ancestor
clan
The 2 kinds of kinships groups based on unilineal descent are
clans and lineages
a form of descent trades through both females and males
cognatic descent
kin relationships traced through a linking relative
collarterality
Kinship is based on both _______ relationships and ______ relationships.
consanguineal and affinal
ones' biological or blood relatives
consanguineal relatives
In Kinship diagrams, circles or squares crossed out signify
deceased
A persons kinship connections traced back through a number of generations.
descent
How does the Iroquois system emphasize the importance of the unilineal descent groups?
distinguishes between member's of one's own lineage and members of other lineages
In Kinship diagrams, a crossed out = is
divorce
a system of descent in which individuals receive some rights and obligations from the father's side of the family and others from the mother's side
double descent
Cognatic descent can be divided into three subgroups:
double, ambilineal, and bilateral
What are the three basic types of multilineal descent groups?
double, ambilineal, bilateral
the person in kinship diagrams from whose point of view the relationships are traced
ego
the kinship system most commonly found in the US; it is associated with bilateral descent. Usually a mother, father, and their children live together
eskimo (inuit) system
T/F: Ambilineal descent groups are less flexible than other types of multilineal groups
false
T/F: Relationships based on blood and marriage are culturally recognized by some societies
false (all)
In highly urbanized, technological societies, fewer/more systems are based on kinship
fewer
relationships among individuals who recognize obligations even though the relationships are not based on either consanguineal or affinal ties
fictive kinship
Bilateral descent is found primarily in which societies?
foraging and industrialized
What is the role of women in patrilineal societies?
give birth to husband's kin; minimal
the ways in which all kinship systems, by requiring people to marry outside their own small kinship group, function to integrate the total society through marriage bonds between otherwise unrelated kin groups
horizontal function of kinship
Eskimo system most likely found in societies in which economic conditions favor
independent nuclear families
all of the relatives a person recognizes in a bilateral kinship system
kindred
What is the single most important aspect of social structures in all societies?
kinship
The description of kinship systems, coined by Malinowski
kinship algebra
Those relationships found in all societies that are based on blood or marriage.
kinship systems
a unilineal descent group whose members can trace their line of descent back to a common ancestor
lineage
kin relationships traced through a single line, such as son, father, and grandfather
lineality
What is the different between lineality and collaterality?
lineality distinguishes between father and father's brother
In matrilineal societies, male authority is weak in ________ but strong in _______
marital, sister's
In Kinship diagrams, the = sign is
marriage
a system of governance whereby women rule over man or are empowered to make decisions over men
matriarchy
Unilineal descent can be divided into two subgroups:
matrilineal and patrilineal
a form of descent in which people trace their primary kin connections through their mothers
matrilineal descent group
a residence pattern in which a married couple lives with or near the relatives of the wife
matrilocal residence
Who is the male child's figure of authority in matrilineal societies?
mother's brother (uncle)
Geographical distribution of patrilineal descent?
native americans, traditional chinese, india, new guinea
a residence in which a couple has its own place of residence apart from the relatives of either spouse
neolocal residence
In preferential cousin marriage, the ______ sex of the father is/is not marriagable
opposite, is
In patrilineal descent groups, women marry
outside their own lineage
a form of descent in which people trace their primary kin connections through their fathers
patrilineal descent group
a resident pattern in which a married couple lives with or near the relatives of the husband's father
patrilocal residence
What are the five basic residence patterns?
patrilocal, matrilocal, avunculocal, ambilocal, and neolocal
recent developments, such as in vitro fertilization, surrogate motherhood, and sperm banks, make the reckoning of kin relationships more complex
reproductive technologies
Many societies have sets of rules that affiliate people with different sets of kin. What are these set of rules called?
rules of descent
In parallel cousin marriage, the ______ sex of the father is/is not marriagable
same, is not
In matrilineal societies, the most important relationship a man has is with his
sister's son
In Kinship diagrams, the unspecified gender is a
square
Why are the relationships between husband and wife more fragile in matrilineal systems?
the mother's brother is the social father of the woman's children
Why are kinship systems important?
they help people adapt to interpersonal and environmental challenges
In Kinship diagrams, the male symbol is a
triangle
T/F: Bilateral systems are symmetrical
true
T/F: Patrilineal descent groups are more common than matrilineal descent groups
true
What are the two rules of descent?
unilineal and cognatic
tracing descent through a single line (such as matrilineal or patrilineal) as compared to both sides (bilateral descent)
unilineal descent
Iroquois system emphasizes the importance of the
unilineal descent groups
The 2 important functions of well-being of society served by kinship systems?
vertical and horizontal function of kinship
the ways in which all kinship systems tend to provide social continuity by binding together different generations
vertical function of kinship