Kinship terminology

Sort By:
Page 5 of 50 - About 500 essays
  • Decent Essays

    Roman Kinship Societies

    • 1498 Words
    • 6 Pages

    Kinship societies are those in which family is the basic and most important guideline for the way people live. The authors of “The Words of Our Ancestors: Kinship, Tradition, and Moral Codes” differentiate between kinship and non-kinship relationships as “not only in the amount of cooperation one is likely to observe (Palmer and Steadman 1997), but in the duration of the relationship” (Coe and Palmer, 4). As mentioned in the text, in kinship societies, families maintain traditions, connections, and

    • 1498 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Decent Essays

    Nutrition Maria agrees that her culture influences her nutrition intake. She loves to include refried beans, whole grain rice, and homemade tortillas with every meal prepared. Her family likes to make their own spices instead of buying them premade off of a grocery shelf. Food and eating connect with her culture, and source of survival/nutrition. A person needs to eat breakfast, lunch (largest meal), and supper. Each meal will be eaten with family if at home or together at that moment in time. A

    • 807 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Best Essays

    The Mbuti Pygmies in the Ituri Forest Essay

    • 2107 Words
    • 9 Pages
    • 8 Works Cited

    The Mbuti Pygmies in the Ituri Forest The Mbuti Pygmies in the Ituri forest in central Africa are foragers who use a combination of foraging, net hunters, and archers. Their kinship, social organization, and gender relations make them a unique band. Even though they live in the rainforest of equatorial Africa with hardly any possessions, they are happy, peaceful people. The pygmies are small people who are typically less than five feet tall. The Mbuti have lived in the Ituri forest for many thousands

    • 2107 Words
    • 9 Pages
    • 8 Works Cited
    Best Essays
  • Decent Essays

    martriarchy. More accurately Mosuo is a matrilineal society but matrilineality does not indicate the entire truth. Approximately 2000 years ago Tibeto-Burman ancestors of existing Mosuo culture devised a family and kinship system that is not based on marriage. They have no husbands and wives. Instead of marrying and sharing family life with spouses, adult Musuo children remain in their extended, multigenerational household with their mother and their blood relatives

    • 1231 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Good Essays

    their fickle nature, lack of industry, methods of hunting and gathering, and political organization, contribute to their primitive nature. As proved by anthropologists, primitive human life is essentially based on genealogy, marriage practices, kinship, settlement arrangements and political affairs. It was through

    • 1458 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Decent Essays

    Presented by, Shailendra Kumar Nitish Singh Amit Dogra FAMILY AND KINSHIP What family means… The family forms the basic unit of social organization and it is difficult to imagine how human society could function without it. The family has been seen as a universal social institution an inevitable part of human society. FAMILY Defining “FAMILY” Various sociologists “family” in various ways:  G.P Murdock defines the family as a social group characterized by common residence, economic

    • 772 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Moso People The Moso are an ethnic gathering of around 40,000 people living in the highlands in southwestern China who rehearse matrilineal drop. Their essential exercises are agriculture and angling. They have their own religion, Ddaba, which is a mixture of nature love, soul love, and genealogical love. They talk their own dialect, Naru, which has a place with the "Yi limb of the Tibeto-Burman subfamily of the Sino-Tibetan family" .In Moso society, ladies are socially better than men. The idea

    • 2208 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    dimension, political dimension, etc. Different communities have different laws of inheritance. However, they are mainly divided into two main categories, namely patrilineal and matrilineal form of inheritance. Patrilineal form of inheritance is a common kinship system wherein an individual 's family membership and inheritance rights are derived from their father 's lineage, whereas

    • 1783 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    characters: Blue Bird and Waterlily. Deloria’s experiences enabled her to contribute to the study of nineteenth-century Dakota life through the historical novel Waterlily; especially, the use of oral history in the creation of the novel, gender roles, and kinship dynamics. Much of the experiences portrayed within Waterlily come from interviews Deloria conducted, thus it is important to examine the role of oral history in the creation of Waterlily. One of the main criticisms of oral history is the tendency

    • 1108 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    The Godfather Reflection

    • 1005 Words
    • 5 Pages

    youngest son is made head of the Corleone family. The youngest son then goes on a rampage for revenge for the traitors of the Corleone family, going against his nature as a moral man. There were more sequels to continue the story. The Godfather depicts kinship between the Corleones based on a patriarch. The Corleone family is a tight knit family. There are many examples of this, but one sticks out to me. At one point of the movie, Santino “Sonny” Corleone, the eldest child of the Corleone Mafia, pays a

    • 1005 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays