Primitive SocietyBoni and Liveright, 1920 - 463 páginas |
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Página
... Mother's and Father's Kin . Parent - in - law Taboo . Other Taboos . Privileged Familiarity . Taboo and License . Teknonymy . VI . THE SIB Types of Sib organization . Unity or Diversity of Origin . Sibs ... Mother- Sibs and Father - Sibs ...
... Mother's and Father's Kin . Parent - in - law Taboo . Other Taboos . Privileged Familiarity . Taboo and License . Teknonymy . VI . THE SIB Types of Sib organization . Unity or Diversity of Origin . Sibs ... Mother- Sibs and Father - Sibs ...
Página 111
... mother . The sib traces kinship through either parent to the total neglect of the other . If a tribe is organized into mother ... Sib organization Unity or Diversity of Origin Sibs of Higher Order Totemism.
... mother . The sib traces kinship through either parent to the total neglect of the other . If a tribe is organized into mother ... Sib organization Unity or Diversity of Origin Sibs of Higher Order Totemism.
Página 114
... sibs conforms indeed with extraor dinary frequency to what I have called the Dakota type ( p . 60 ) . The ... mother's sib - mates . The alignment of kindred in sibs goe hand in hand with their alignment in terminology . It i therefore ...
... sibs conforms indeed with extraor dinary frequency to what I have called the Dakota type ( p . 60 ) . The ... mother's sib - mates . The alignment of kindred in sibs goe hand in hand with their alignment in terminology . It i therefore ...
Página 116
... mother - sibs were not composed wholly of individuals related to one another by blood but could be separated into two or three distinct matri- lineal groups which regarded themselves as related only by a legal fiction . What we know of ...
... mother - sibs were not composed wholly of individuals related to one another by blood but could be separated into two or three distinct matri- lineal groups which regarded themselves as related only by a legal fiction . What we know of ...
Página 117
... mother - sibs and there is a close social bond uniting the members of a sib . There , however , analogy virtually ends . The very names of the sibs are of a wholly different character ; they are in no case nicknames but are derived for ...
... mother - sibs and there is a close social bond uniting the members of a sib . There , however , analogy virtually ends . The very names of the sibs are of a wholly different character ; they are in no case nicknames but are derived for ...
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Términos y frases comunes
Africa age-classes Andaman Islanders associated assume Australian avunculate bachelors Banks Islands belong brother ceremonial chief Chukchi civilization club complex conception connection correlation cousins cross-cousin Crow culture custom Dakota daughter definite descent distinct economic elders Eskimo exogamous fact factor father father-sibs feature female graded Gros Ventre Hence Hidatsa Hopi Hupa husband Ifugao individual inheritance initiation Iroquois Kariera kinship Kirgiz Koryak land levirate Maidu male marriage married Masai mate maternal uncle matrilineal matrilocal residence Melanesia merely moiety mother mother-in-law mother-sibs notion Ostyak ownership parents phenomena Plains Indian polyandry polygyny primitive principle privileges rank region relations relatives rule scheme Schurtz sexual sib organization sibless sisters social unit society sororate stage status taboo territory theory Thonga tion totemic tribal tribes Tylor usages Vedda village wife wife's wives woman women Yukaghir
Pasajes populares
Página 345 - The history of political ideas begins, in fact, with the assumption that kinship in blood is the sole possible ground of community in political functions ; nor is there any of those subversions of feeling, which we term emphatically revolutions, so startling and so complete as the change which is accomplished when some other principle — such as that, for instance, of local contiguity — establishes itself for the first time as the basis of common political action.
Página 3 - Civilization, taken in its wide ethnographic sense, is that complex whole which includes knowledge, belief, art, morals, law, custom, and any other capabilities and habits acquired by man as a member of society.
Página 175 - As noted, matrilineal descent was at one time interpreted to mean that women govern not merely the family but also the primitive equivalent of the state. Probably there is not a single theoretical problem on which modern anthropologists are so thoroughly in accord as with respect to the utter worthlessness of that inference.
Página 139 - ... few years later, when Eutyches, who had been one of Cyril's agents against Nestorius at Constantinople, was arraigned for teaching what he believed to be Cyril's doctrine, and was supported by Cyril's successor at Alexandria. Eutyches, the archimandrite, might of course expect support from monks : but there is no evidence, so far as I am aware, that any question affecting the status of monks or the honour of the Virgin entered into the Eutychian controversy. It would, I believe, be an anachronism...
Página 163 - Just as the forms of life, and even the actual fossils of the Carboniferous formation, may be traced on into the Permian, but Permian types and fossils are absent from the Carboniferous strata formed before they came into existence, so here widow-inheritance and couvade, which, if the maternal system had been later than the paternal, would have lasted on into it, prove by their absence the priority of the maternal.
Página 171 - ... if the highest civilizations emphasize the paternal side of the family, so do many of the lowest...
Página 58 - Sexual communism as a condition taking the place of the individual family exists nowhere at the present time; and the arguments for its former existence must be rejected as unsatisfactory.
Página 49 - ... from the opposite shore arrived at the maritime Asiatic villages of the Chukchee they found their temporary wives in the houses of their friends, and similarly the Chukchee traders had their temporary wives on the American...
Página 62 - Although the family is typically a social group of great cohesiveness, consisting of a man and his wife or wives, and their children, it is often a wider group, containing, perhaps, husbands and wives of the children, as well as the children of these, and other relatives as well. The term "joint family" has been used when such family-groups are of normal occurrence in a society.
Página 190 - Those who set out with the evolutionary dogma that every social condition now found in civilization must have developed from some condition far removed from it through a series of transitional stages, will consistently embrace the hypothesis that the property sense so highly developed with us was wholly or largely wanting in primitive society, that it must have evolved from its direct antithesis, communism in goods of every kind.