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Lineage and Descent. ANTH 321: Kinship and Social Organization Kimberly Martin,Ph.D. What Is Kinship?. DEFINITION The rules and standards for organizing into families. We use kinship diagrams to visually understand kinship groups.
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Lineage and Descent ANTH 321: Kinship and Social Organization Kimberly Martin,Ph.D.
What Is Kinship? DEFINITION The rules and standards for organizing into families We use kinship diagrams to visually understand kinship groups
A standard kinship diagram has two of each type of relative EGO can have, one that is male and one that is female. As a result, standard kinship diagram does not have the complexity of most real family diagrams. A standard kinship diagram is shown below. Notice that EGO’s parents each have two siblings, one sister and one brother. Likewise each of these has two children, one male and one female. What Is a Standard Kinship Diagram?
What is a Lineage? • Definition: A group that is descended from a common ancestor. Lineages are derived from descent.
Lineage Synonyms • descent • descent groups • lineages • cognates • fictive kinship • The reckoning of relationship based on a common ancestor • A group of people related by descent by a common ancestor • A group of people related by a common ancestor • Having a common origin • Acting as if someone is kin when they are actually not
Kinds of Lineages • Patrilineal Descent • Matrilineal Descent • Bilateral/Cognatic Descent • Ambilineal Descent
What is a Patrilineage? DEFINITION Relationships and/or a descent group based on male links only
Diagraming a Patrilineage The diagram below show all relatives in EGO’s patrilineage in blue. Notice that if a person is in EGO’s patrilineage, all siblings of that person are also in EGO’s patrilineage. EGO’s mother is not part of his patrilineage, nor are any of her family members. His mother is part of another patrilineage that includes 3, 10, 12, 13, 23 and 24.
Patrilineal Inheritance The diagram below shows how property is typically inherited in a patrilineal system. The blue lines show how inheritance moves from one male individual in a generation to male individuals in succeeding generations.
What is a Matrilineage? DEFINITION Relationships and/or a descent group based on female links only
Diagramming a Matrilineage The diagram below show all relatives in EGO’s matrilineage in pink. Notice that if a person is in EGO’s matrilineage, all siblings of that person are also in EGO’s patrilineage. EGO’s father is not part of his matrilineage, nor are any of his family members. His father is part of another matrilineage that includes 2, 6, 7, 9, 15 and 16.
Matrilineal Inheritance The diagram below shows how property is typically inherited in a matrilineal system. Notice that females are the links that connect men who will inherit. The pink lines show how inheritance moves from one male individual in a generation to male individuals in succeeding generations. Women do not typically manage property, even in a matrilineal system.
Mother’s Brother in Matrilineages In matrilineal societies, EGO’s mother’s brother is a very important relative, because he is the one who controls the property that EGO will inherit. EGO is the mother’s brother of his sister’s son(s). EGO will therefore manage his matrilineage’s property for his sister’s sons to inherit. EGO’s own children will not inherit from him. They will inherit from their mother’s (EGO’s future wife’s) brother(s).
Cognatic/Bilateral Lineage • Reckoning descent using both male and female relationships • The kind of lineage most common in the United States.
Ambilineal Descent • When family members are able to choose which side of the family with which to affiliate. • Examples: • Samoa, • Iban (Borneo) • Highland Scots
Moiety • A kinship system in which a society has paired lineages that act in complementary ways, usually with regard to marriage. i.e. Members of moiety A must marry an individual from moiety B and vice versa.
Phratry Ramage • A kinship group made up of several related clans • A conical clan made up of cognatic relatives tracing their ancestry to a single founding ancestor through either male or female links. • An ambilineal descent group.
Study Guide • Kinship • Lineage • Clan • Matrilineal • Patrilineal • Cognatic • Bilateral • Ambilineal • Inheritance • Mother’s Brother • Moiety • Phratry • Ramage • Descent • Cognates • Fictive Kinship