Ant 9
KINSHIP AND GENDER CHAPTER 16
FAMILIES, MARRIAGE, KINSHIP, AND GENDER VARY WIDELY AROUND
THE WORLD
What are families, and how are they structured in different societies?
Why do people get married?
In what ways are males and females different, or are they?
What does it mean to be neither male nor female?
WHAT ARE FAMILIES, AND HOW ARE THEY STRUCTURED IN
DIFFERENT SOCIETIES?
Families fulfill similar functions in most societies:
Comfort and belonging for members, sense of identity, shared values and ideals, economic cooperation, and nurturance of
children
Although the functions above are common, the patterns of achieving them are constructed in culturally specific
and dynamic systems of kinship:
Kinship is the social system that organizes people in families based on descent and marriage.
KINSHIP CHART
A visual representation of family
relationships.
These charts are useful for diagramming
biological relationships, if not the cultural
meanings associated with these
relationships.
Here the chart shows members of the
extended family from a husband/father’s
perspective. Of course, the chart could be
drawn from the wife/mother’s perspective as
well.
THE SIX BASIC SYSTEMS OF
KINSHIP
Anthropologists have identified six different basic
kinship systems. The differences can be understood
by how people refer to the different cousins.
FAMILIES ARE DYNAMIC
Families are not permanent entities, since
members come and go. Individuals may be
members of multiple families in the course
of a lifetime, beginning with a natal family:
The family into which a person is
born and (usually) raised.
In other words, families are dynamic.
WHAT IS THE TRADITIONAL FAMILY?
The realities of life in any given society often create a gap between its real and idealized family types.
Politicians and religious leaders in the United States often argue for “traditional” marriages, families, and
values—
rarely bothering to specify which traditions they’re referring to.
THE SITCOM “TRADITIONAL” FAMILY
Working father, stay-at-home mother, dependent children → nuclear family
A recent and short-lived phenomenon in the United States
Low birth rates during Depression and WWII
Unprecedented economic growth, family stability, and a lot of babies in the 1950s
Spurred the development and spread of suburban housing
Began to change in the late 1960s in many interconnected ways:
More women in the workforce
More two0income households
Fewer children (one or two, rather than three or four)
More divorces
More blended families
THE NUCLEAR FAMILY
Still, the United States and many other nations in the world view the nuclear family as an ideal form.
Nuclear family: the family formed by a married couple and their children.
The most basic unit if kinship.
FAMILY COOPERATION
Families function as corporate groups: groups of real people who
work together toward common ends much like a corporation
does
Extended families were common in 19th century America
Households shared by nuclear relatives, grandparents, unmarried aunts
or uncles, etc. A larger group of relatives often living in the same
household
In hard economic times, extended-family households provide a larger
number of potential wage earners to contribute to the family’s needs (Photo Courtesy of Robert L. Welsch)
TYPE OF EXTENDED FAMILIES: DESCENT GROUPS
Clan
A group of relatives who claim to be descended from a single ancestor
Ancestor may be an animal or supernatural entity
Most often exogamous
Lineage
A group composed of relatives who are directly descended from known ancestors
Usually a literal human ancestor
Types of Clans and Lineages
Type Definition Features Examples
Patrilineal Membership based on descent
from common male ancestor
Inheritance of property rights, rights, names, and
titles comes through father.
Omaha Indians, Nuer of South
Sudan, most Americans inherit
names patrilineally.
Matrilineal Membership based on descent
from common female ancestor
Every man or women is a member of his or her
mother’s clan. Not about political power but
identity and group membership.
Trobriand Islanders.
Cognatic Descent through both mother
and father
Membership in multiple clans is possible and typical. Samoans of Central Polynesia.
UNILINEAL DESCENT
Patrilineal: reckoning descent through males from the
same ancestors.
Most clans and lineages in nonindustrial societies are
patrilineal.
Matrilineal: reckoning descent through women, who are
descended from an ancestral woman.
Everyone is a member of his or her mother’s clan
A person’s strongest identity is with his or her relatives
in a mother’s clan and lineage.
HOW FAMILIES CONTROL POWER AND WEALTH
One cross-cultural function of families is managing their members’ wealth. In this sense, wealth is broader than just
currency, including resources, the work and reproductive capacity of family members, and inheritance rights when a
member dies.
Anthropologists studying nonindustrial societies in early to mid-twentieth-century realized that women’s labor in
the fields and gardens in horticultural, agricultural, and pastoral communities was extremely important to the
family.
Bride price - exchange of gifts or money to compensate another clan or family for the loss of one of its women along with
her productive and reproductive abilities in marriage (Example: Cattle, pigs, shell, labor)
Childprice - intended to buy rights of a woman’s children, compensation to women’s family for a child who now belongs
to a different clan.
Dowry – gifts or money given to a daughter to ensure her well-being in husband’s family.
Rules of Inheritance - an orderly process and keep wealth and property in the family.
RULES OF INHERITANCE
Families also control wealth, property, and power through
inheritance rules
Create an orderly process and keep wealth and property in the family
Inheritance rules have been codified as law in Western countries for
centuries
Nonindustrial societies, even those without legal codes, also have
inheritance rules.
WHY DO PEOPLE GET MARRIED?
Many forms and purposes; has not “always” been one way
Marrying for love is a recent development
In most countries, marriage is about creating economic and
political alliances between families.
Marrying for romantic love seen as risky
Marriage creates formally recognized ties between families
Any children resulting from the union are considered
“legitimate.”
FORMS OF MARRIAGE
Polygamy: any form of plural marriage. Previously far
more common in Africa, Asia, the Americas, and the
Pacific than it is today.
Polygyny: When a man is simultaneously married to
more than one woman
Polyandry: When a woman has two or more
husbands at one time.
MARRIAGE RULES
All cultures have rules regarding sex and marriage.
In arranged marriages, parents may select partners from specific
socioeconomic, religious, educational, or ethnic backgrounds
Incest taboo: the prohibition on sexual relations between close family
members
Some cultures prohibit marriage between cousins (or, at least, specific types of
cousins), while others do not
WHY IS THERE AN INCEST TABOO?
The prohibition against sexual relations between specified individuals,
usually parent-child and sibling relations at a minimum.
What constitutes a relative, and therefore incest, varies widely from
culture to culture.
Evolutionary explanations:
an adaptive measure to avoid birth defects associated with incest
“Westermarck effect”: natural selection causes us to lack sexual attraction
toward people in and around our natal families.
Cultural explanations: taboos can be explained socially
IN WHAT WAYS ARE MALES AND FEMALES DIFFERENT?
Differences are reinforced by powerful, ongoing messages that tend to
stereotype roles.
These stereotypes have become topics of intense debate:
Why are women excluded from certain kinds of jobs?
Why are men dominant in certain professions?
What is gender?
Gender is defined as the expectations of how male and females should behave
WHY DOES OUR CULTURE CONSTRUCT GENDER DIFFERENCES IN
THESE SPECIFIC WAYS?
Primary explanation in our culture: males and females are “hardwired”
differently
Differences in sex, the reproductive forms and functions of the body, are
often thought to produce differences in attitudes, temperaments,
intelligences, aptitudes, and even achievements between males and females
Male-female differences are shaped by a mix of biology, environmental
conditions, and sociocultural processes
Useless dichotomies?
Biology or culture
Sex or gender
WHAT ARE COMMON GENDER STEREOTYPES?
Women are supposed to have "clean jobs" such as secretaries, teachers,
and librarians
Women are nurses, not doctors
Women are not as strong as men
Women are supposed to make less money than men
Women don’t need to go to college
Women are not politicians
Women are quieter than men and not meant to speak out
Women are supposed to be submissive and do as they are told
Women are supposed to cook and do housework
Women are responsible for raising children
Women do not have technical skills and are not good at "hands on"
projects such as car repairs
Women are supposed to look pretty and be looked at
Women love to sing and dance
Women do not play video games
All men enjoy working on cars
Men are not nurses, they are doctors
Men do "dirty jobs" such as construction and mechanics; they are not
secretaries, teachers, or cosmetologists
Men do not do housework and they are not responsible for taking care
of children
Men play video games
Men play sports
Men enjoy outdoor activities such as camping, fishing, and hiking
Men are in charge; they are always at the top
As husbands, men tell their wives what to do
Men are lazy and/or messy
Men are good at math
It is always men who work in science, engineering, and other technical
fields
Men do not cook, sew, or do crafts
GENDER STEREOTYPES
Simply put, gender stereotypes are generalizations about the roles of each gender. Gender roles are generally neither positive nor negative; they are simply inaccurate generalizations of the male and female attributes.
Gender stereotypes begin the second a baby’s gender is found out. As soon as we find out it’s a girl, we immediately begin decorating a pink nursery filled with soft décor and butterflies and flowers. We assume that our daughter will be very "girly" and fill her closet with frilly dresses and her toy box with tea sets and dolls.
Stereotyping is no different when it’s found out that a boy is on the way. The nursery is decked out in blue, his closet is filled with tiny jeans, polo shirts, and boots, and the theme is usually something like jungle animals or dinosaurs; something tough. Boys’ toys consist of trucks, dinosaurs, action figures, and video games.
Are you surprised to hear that most parents admit that they do not teach their sons how to do chores such as washing dishes or folding laundry? Instead, they teach them to take out the trash and mow the lawn; from the get-go boys are made to think that certain household chores are "women’s work."
BEYOND “EITHER/OR”
The dichotomy between males and females breaks down as variations in
chromosomes. Starting with the basics, human females possess two X
chromosomes on their 23rd pair of chromosomes, while males possess an XY
on their 23rd pair. This minor variation is what differentiates males from females
on a genetic level, which gives rise to all of the biological differences.
Some individuals diverge from the male-female norm and are called intersex,
exhibiting sexual organs and functions somewhere between, or including, male
and female elements.
One estimate puts the frequency of intersex in the United States at 1.7% of all
live births, but the rates of intersex vary between populations.
Different societies deal with intersex differently: some do not make anatomical
features the dominant factors in constructing gender/sex identities, and some
cultures recognize biological sex as a continuum.
MORE THAN TWO
Some people diverge from male-female norm, called intersex
Societies deal with intersex differently:
Some do not make anatomy the dominant factor in constructing
gender/sex identities
Some cultures recognize biological sex as a continuum
North American and European societies – which construct sex as either
male or female based on genitalia – have considered intersexuality
abnormal, sometimes even immoral
In the US most intersex children are treated shortly after birth with “sex-
assignment surgery”, where genitalia is constructed based on cultural
assumptions
“Human Rights for Hermaphrodites, Too!” (hermaphrodite was previously the
common term for intersex) (Photo: FABRICE COFFRINI/AFP/Getty Images)
GENDER VARIANCE
Male/female dichotomy is constructed
Many gender/sex systems around the world are less
rigid or constraining than our own
Example: the Navajo recognize five genders (Male,
Female, Nadleeche [intersex], Nadleeche [masculine
female], Nadleeche [feminine male]. In India three
genders are now recognized
In many societies, some people live their lives as
neither male nor female
Have a culturally accepted, often prestigious, symbolic
niche and social pathway
THIRD GENDER SYSTEMS IN OTHER SOCIETIES
Third gender often entangled in debates about
sexuality
Gender/sex identities are established not by sexual
practices but through social performance
Example: The Navajo Nádleehé (one who is constantly
changing) are individuals that combine male and female
roles and characteristics and are highly respected,
participating in religious ceremonies and acting as
spiritual healers and go-betweens in arranging
marriages and mediating conflicts.
IS HUMAN SEXUALITY JUST A MATTER OF BEING STRAIGHT OR
QUEER?
Sexuality is usually seen as binary: heterosexual or homosexual,
but in reality, human sexuality is complex and subtle and exists
along a continuum
Continuum from asexual (non-sexuality) to polyamorous (love of
many).
Major difficulty in studying sexuality in other societies is the
problem of adequately naming it
Concepts of same-sex sexuality also vary widely across the globe.
Societies place limits on sexuality by making rules about who can
sleep with whom
Modern governments have asserted unprecedented levels of control
over sexuality, implementing and enforcing laws that limit the kinds of
sexual relations their citizens can have
CONCLUSION
The concept of sexuality—who can sleep with whom and the sexual relationships and practices in which people
engage– is a key dimension of the larger theses of kinship and gender
These concepts are intertwined in complex ways, shaping the ideas and social patterns a society uses to organize
and control males and females, as well as those who do not fit these categories.
Its important to remember that the ways in which we think of these matters, are not as universal as we may
assume and these constructs are not as “stable” as we think. Rather they feel stable in our everyday experiences
because they are powerful cultural constructions reproduced and upheld in our everyday lives and most
important social institutions