Mirror For Humanity: Families, Kinship, and Marriage
Mirror For Humanity: Families, Kinship, and Marriage
Mirror For Humanity: Families, Kinship, and Marriage
Chapter 8
Families, Kinship, and Marriage
• Descent groups
– Descent group – a permanent social unit whose
members claim common ancestry
– Two types of unilineal descent:
• Patrilineal descent – people automatically have lifetime
membership in their father’s group
• Matrilineal descent – people automatically have lifetime
membership in their mother’s group
– Patrilineal descent is much more common than
matrilineal descent
• Descent groups
– Descent groups may be lineages or clans
• Lineage – a descent group whose members can
demonstrate their common descent from an apical
ancestor (demonstrated descent)
• Clan – a descent group whose members claim common
descent from an apical ancestor but cannot
demonstrate it (stipulated descent)
– Totem – a nonhuman (animal or plant) apical ancestor of
a clan
– Local descent groups – branches of descent
groups that live in different villages
• Marriage
– No single definition of marriage can account for
all of the cross-cultural diversity in marriages
– Exogamy
• Practice of seeking a spouse outside one's own group
• Forces people to create and maintain a wide social
network – nurtures, helps, and protects one's group
during times of need
– Incest
• Sexual relations with a close relative
• Incest taboo is a cultural universal
• What constitutes incest varies cross-culturally
• Marriage
– Endogamy
• Mating or marriage within a group to which
one belongs
• Most cultures are endogamous units, and
classes and ethnic groups within a society
may also be quasi-endogamous
• Marriage
– Caste system of India
• Extreme example of endogamy
• Castes – stratified groups in which lifelong membership
is ascribed at birth
• Occupational specialization often distinguishes castes
• Belief that intercaste sexual unions lead to ritual
impurity for the higher-caste partner – helps to maintain
endogamy and ensure the pure ancestry of high-caste
children
• Castes are endogamous, but many are internally
subdivided into exogamous lineages
• Marital rights
– According to Leach, marriage can (but does not always):
• Establish the legal father of a woman’s children and the legal
mother of a man’s
• Give either or both spouses a monopoly in the sexuality of the
other
• Give either or both spouses rights to the labor of the other
• Give either or both spouses rights over the other’s property
• Establish a joint fund of property for the benefit of the children
• Establish a socially significant “relationship of affinity”
between spouses and their relatives
• Divorce
– Ease of divorce varies cross-culturally
• Marriages that are political alliances between groups
are harder to break up than are marriages that are more
individual affairs
• Bridewealth discourages divorce
• Replacement marriages (levirate and sororate) help to
preserve group alliances
• Divorce is more common in matrilineal and matrilocal
societies (e.g., the Hopi)
• Divorce is harder in patrilocal societies – women are
reluctant to leave their children, who are members of
their fathers’ lineages
• Divorce
– Foraging societies:
• Factors favoring divorce:
– No descent groups, so the political alliance functions of
marriage are less important
– Foragers tend to have few material possessions – makes
the process of dissolving a joint fund of property easier
• Factors opposing divorce:
– Durable ties between spouses because the family is an
important year-round unit with a gender-based division of
labor
– Few alternative spouses because of sparse populations
• Divorce
– Contemporary Western societies:
• Divorce may occur when sex, romance, and/or
companionship fade
• Factors opposing divorce: economic ties,
obligations to children, concern about public
opinion, inertia
• Plural marriages
– Polygamy – marriage to more than one spouse at
a time
– Polygyny – a man has more than one wife
• Even in cultures that encourage polygyny, monogamy
tends to be the norm due to roughly equal sex ratios
• Promoted by the custom of men marrying later than
women (more widows than widowers)
• Various reasons for polygyny:
– Inheritance of a widow from a brother
– May increase prestige or household productivity
– An infertile wife remains married to her husband after her
descent group provides a substitute wife
• Plural marriages
– Polyandry – a woman has more than one
husband
• Very rare – almost exclusively in South Asia
(Tibet, Nepal, India, Sri Lanka)
• Cultural adaptation to mobility associated with
customary male travel for trade, commerce,
and military operations
• Ensures there will be at least one man at
home to accomplish male activities
• Plural marriages
– Polyandry
• Fraternal polyandry – effective strategy when
resources are scarce
– Expanded polyandrous households allow brothers
to pool resources
– Restricts the number of wives and heirs, so land
can be transmitted with minimal fragmentation