Chapter 10

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In all societies, biology is more important than culture to the definition of kinship. T or F?

False

Kindreds are found in both unlineal and cognatic descent systems. T or F?

False

Patrilineal societies usually have a higher divorce rate than matrilineal societies. T or F?

False

The Zuni of New Mexico are patrilineal and patrilocal. T or F?

False

Today it is more difficult to obtain information on your distant relatives than it was in past decades. T or F?

False

Women are the major decision-makers in a matrilineal society. T or F?

False

In her study of homeless youth, Finkelstein used an "emic" approach to research. T or F?

True

Kinship provides social continuity by binding together a number of successive generations. T or F?

True

The first ascending generation would include EGO's mother, father, and the sisters and brothers of the mother and father. T or F?

True

The majority of kinship systems found in the world are based on the unilineal principle. T or F?

True

Patrilineal descent groups a. are the most common of the unilinear descent groups. b. are found only in North and South America. c. trace descent through lines of females; for example, the mother, mother's mother, sister's daughter, and so on. d. are ones in which a woman's children are members of her descent group.

a. are the most common of the unilinear descent groups.

"Partible paternity," as practiced by the Bari of Venezuela, means that: a. children can have more than one biological father b. biological fatherhood is not acknowledged at all c. a child is raised by his grandfather, not his biological father d. the biological father is never the social father.

a. children can have more than one biological father

All unilineal descent groups a. endure over time and clearly define who is a member and who is not. b. allow members to decide which descent groups they want to belong to; therefore these groups change membership and size radically from generation to generation. c. cannot clearly define who is or is not a member, but still manage to endure over time. d. allow individuals to first identify themselves as individuals and then as members of the kinship group.

a. endure over time and clearly define who is a member and who is not.

In all human societies, kinship is tied to the biological relationships created by human reproduction. However, a. how different societies sort and categorize kinship relationships is as much a matter of culture as it is of biology. b. bilateral descent systems are less influenced by culture than others. c. unilineal descent systems are seldom influenced by cultural definitions of social relationships. d. ambilateral descent systems are the least influenced by culture than others.

a. how different societies sort and categorize kinship relationships is as much a matter of culture as it is of biology.

The Hawaiian system of kinship classification uses the same term for all relatives of the same a. sex and generation. b. age. c. mother. d. father.

a. sex and generation.

The term descent is used by anthropologists to refer to a. the rules a culture uses to establish affiliations with one's parents. b. the rules a culture uses to establish affiliations with one's siblings. c. all blood and marriage relationships that help people distinguish between categories of kin. d. all marriage relationships that help people distinguish between different catego

a. the rules a culture uses to establish affiliations with one's parents.

Which statement about the Zuni (New Mexico) kinship system is true? a. They have a bilateral system. b. Husbands divide their time and allegiances between the lineages of their wives and the lineages of their mothers. c. Women are the major figures in performing sacred lineage ceremonies. d. They practice patrilocal residence.

b. Husbands divide their time and allegiances between the lineages of their wives and the lineages of their mothers.

Which statement about the Chinese patrilineal family is false? a. It is male focussed. b. Women give their total allegiance to their husband's family. c. Children must show deference and obedience to their parents. d. Inheritance is passed from a man to his son.

b. Women give their total allegiance to their husband's family.

In bilateral descent, individuals a. are members of the kinship group their parents have selected for them. b. are equally related to both the mother's and the father's side of the family. c. trace descent from both a patrilineage and a matrilineage. d. can choose with which side of the family they wish to affiliate.

b. are equally related to both the mother's and the father's side of the family.

Individuals, except for siblings, have a unique kindred in a a. patrilineal descent system. b. bilateral descent system. c. unilineal descent system. d. a and c

b. bilateral descent system.

Clans, as unilineal descent groups, a. are the same organizations as lineages, except that they form parts of chiefdoms and not tribes. b. claim that they are all related to a common ancestor, but cannot trace that genealogical connection step-by-step. c. are smaller in size than lineages. d. control more property than any other type of descent group.

b. claim that they are all related to a common ancestor, but cannot trace that genealogical connection step-by-step.

12. A kinship diagram of EGO and all of her children and cousins would include a. the lineal relatives which belong to a clan. b. collateral relatives. c. a lineage. d. lineal relatives.

b. collateral relatives.

Unilineal descent systems a. establish ambiguous social units. b. comprise approximately sixty percent of all kinship systems in the world. c. establish special relationships between EGO and his mother's brother. d. establish special relationships between EGO and his brother's sister.

b. comprise approximately sixty percent of all kinship systems in the world.

Anthropologists, as compared to other social scientists, have spent a great deal of time studying kinship because they have a. always focused largely on biological relationships. b. concentrated mainly on small-scale societies where kinship relations tend to be important. c. always studied fictional relationships. d. concentrate on industrial societies where kinship relations tend to be important.

b. concentrated mainly on small-scale societies where kinship relations tend to be important

Affinal kin include one's a. father. b. father-in-law. c. brother. d. father's brother.

b. father-in-law.

An "aunt" or "uncle" who has no biological or marital relationship is an example of a/an a. cross cousin. b. fictive kin. c. affine. d. parallel cousin.

b. fictive kin.

In a matrilineal society, a boy's father figure is his: a. maternal grandfather b. mother's brother c. father's brother d. father's sister's husband

b. mother's brother

In matrilineal descent systems, a. women have greater power and authority than men. b. property and political office pass from one man to another, but through women. c. women and men have similar power and authority. d. women control property and political office.

b. property and political office pass from one man to another, but through women.

The Navajo (New Mexico) system of kinship a. is very similar to that which governs students in urban Chicago schools. b. strictly governs the behavior of members of the same clan c. requires people to find marriage partners within their own clan. d. is characterized by clan endogamy

b. strictly governs the behavior of members of the same clan

A kinship diagram of a married couple, their children, and their children's children would include a. four generations; therefore four rows of kinship figures. b. three generations; therefore three rows of kinship figures. c. only affinal relatives. d. only consanguineal relatives.

b. three generations; therefore three rows of kinship figures.

Your father's sister's children and your mother's brother's children are your a. parallel cousins. b. patrilineal kin. c. cross cousins. d. matrilineal kin.

c. cross cousins.

In the modern world, kinship a. no longer has importance. b. no longer provides close and emotional social ties as it did in the past. c. has become much more complex because of new reproductive technologies. d. systems remain unchanged through contact with external forces such as colonization and cultural diffusion.

c. has become much more complex because of new reproductive technologies.

Though cultural anthropology is interested in all societies of the world, it has, in actual practice, tended to concentrate in small-scale societies where a. kinship relations have little importance in economic transactions. b. kinship relations have little importance in transfers of political power. c. kinship relations tend to be all encompassing. d. political and economic relationships are usually not played out with kin.

c. kinship relations tend to be all encompassing.

The most important factor contributing to social structure is a. political activities. b. religious activities. c. kinship. d. cultural mythology.

c. kinship.

In her study of homeless youth, Finklestein found that a. most homeless children never return home to their parents. b. they came from wealthy families. c. most preferred a nomadic lifestyle d. they had few friends and acquaintance

c. most preferred a nomadic lifestyle

Human social organization, compared to that of other species, is a. unique because only humans live in permanent groups with patterned relationships among other group members. b. similar to all mammals because group living is always extremely important. c. much more complex. d. live in relatively simple groups.

c. much more complex.

EGO refers to the a. oldest living relative. b. oldest living relative on the father's side. c. person from whose point of view we are tracing the relationship. d. mother's brother's wife.

c. person from whose point of view we are tracing the relationship.

Cross-culturally, most kinship systems across cultures a. provide few links between successive generations. b. provide few ties across a single generation. c. provide links between successive generations and ties across a single generation. d. only link successive generations.

c. provide links between successive generations and ties across a single generation.

The use of the same term "uncle" for our mother's brother and our mother's sister's husband is an example of a. the lack of consideration of biological links in determining kinship in all societies. b. the importance of distinguishing between biological relationships found in all cultures. c. the importance of culture in defining kin relationships in most societies. d. the fact that some kinship systems are inferior to some others.

c. the importance of culture in defining kin relationships in most societies.

Some societies make distinctions among kinship categories a. based on whether people are older or younger than EGO. b. based upon whether EGO is related through his mother's or his father's side. c. determined by whether people are in EGO's generation. d. all of the above

d. all of the above

Unilineal descent groups last over time and have a corporate nature, which means a. they shape a person's identity in some significant way. b. they regulate marriage, and kin on both the bride and groom's sides must give approval. c. they control property such as land and animals. d. all of the above

d. all of the above

Kinship refers to those relationships found in all societies that a. are based on blood. b. include consanguineal relatives. c. include affinal relatives. d. all of the above.

d. all of the above.

Which statement about the Zumbaguan notion of parenthood is true? a. Biological connection is the most important factor in determining parenthood. b. Claims to parenthood are created by adults nurturing and caring for a child over a long period of time. c. Feeding and sharing food with a child is more important than biological connection when determining parenthood. d. b and c only

d. b and c only

Which statement about Finkelstein's study of homeless youth is true? a. there are about 50,000 run away youth in the U.S. every year b. most of the youth in this study were from wealthy homes c. homeless youth tend to find a city they like and then stay there d. homeless youth have extensive networks of friends who substitute for family

d. homeless youth have extensive networks of friends who substitute for family

All of the following are criteria used to distinguish between different kin categories except a. generation. b. gender. c. side of the family. d. level of formal education.

d. level of formal education.

Ancestry is traced, step-by-step, back to a common founder in a. clans. b. matrilineages only. c. patrilineages only. d. lineages.

d. lineages.

A kinship diagram of a son, father, grandfather, and great grandfather would include a. affinal relatives. b. collateral relatives. c. two genders. d. lineal relatives.

d. lineal relatives.

Unilineal descent systems with moieties a. always have clans. b. always have lineages. c. always have phratries. d. may or may not have phratries, clans, and lineages

d. may or may not have phratries, clans, and lineages

In societies with a double descent system, members are a. free to choose to which group they will belong. b. able to choose whether to belong to the matrilineage on their father's or on their mother's side of the family. c. able to choose whether to belong to the patrilineage on their father's or on their mother's side of the family. d. part of both their matrilineage and their patrilineage.

d. part of both their matrilineage and their patrilineage.

Traditional Chinese families are good examples of a. bilateral kinship. b. matrilineal kinship. c. double descent. d. patrilineal kinship.

d. patrilineal kinship.


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