Ritual Kinship: A Short Paper

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Overview
Exercise ID: 1.15
Class size: Any
Level(s): II
Source: Submitted by HRAF member


Learning Objectives

Does the exercise compare 2 or more cultures? No
Subject selection: Single subject specified by teacher
Subjects/OCMS, if applicable: Ritual kinship
Region selection: open (student choice)
Region, if applicable: Various
Culture selection: Student chooses from pre-selected list
Cultures/OWCs, if applicable: non-Western society
Samples:

Classroom Guide

Instructions for navigating eHRAF included? No
Assignments for students to complete in groups? No
Assignments for students to complete on their own? Yes
Instructions for Microfiche version? Yes
 

Dan Strouthes, Department of Geography and Anthropology, University of Wisconsin

Instructions for the short paper

In an effort to improve both your writing and your grasp of cultural anthropology, I have assigned a short paper as part of the requirements for this course.  The paper should be approximately 4-5 typed pages in length. The subject will be the function of ritual kinship, and is due on or before December 6.

To make scope of the assignment clearer, I will tell you that the function of ritual kinship is to use fictive kinship links for non-kinship purposes. For example, a sorority has as its members women who call each other sisters, but who are not in fact sisters. The purpose of sorority members calling each other sisters is to create a sibling-like bond between them. Your assignment is to take an example of ritual kinship, describe it, describe its function(s), and analyze the importance of the ritual kinship to the society in which it is found.

You must use data from a non-Western society (that is, a society which is not European and not culturally related to European society, such as the larger US society is). In other words, you can work with societies such as Taiwan-Hokkien, or Western Apache, or Mbuti (Africa) or Kogi (South American Indian), etc.

A good place to look for cases is in ethnographies, and the university library has an excellent selection of these. Use the electronic card catalog to look for ethnographies on various peoples. To search for ethnographies you must search the card catalog under the name of the people or peoples you are interested in; do not look under the term “ethnography.” You could also look for sources listed in the bibliography of the textbook. A good source for North American Indian ethnographies is the bibliography of the Handbook of North American Indians, which can be found in the library.

Also search the documents in the eHRAF World Cultures on the Web, available in the anthropology database section at the the university’s digital library, for information on kinship. Browse the Cultures Covered List on HRAF’s homepage for culture names, regions, and subsistence types currently available in eHRAF.  Other Internet sites are usually insufficient in both quantity and quality for data for this kind of paper.

You may also be able to find some good cases in the Human Relations Area Files microfiche collection (located in the basement of McIntyre Library). The problem with the older HRAF collection is that it is on microfiche and in some cases previous users have not returned the microfiche cards to their proper locations. The key to understanding the structure of the HRAF microfiche collection and eHRAF on the Webis a thesaurus-type manual called the Outline of Cultural Materials. In the eHRAF World Cultures on the Web you can find the Outline of Cultural Materials in the Browse Subjects section.

If you cannot find any useful sources, see me and I can direct you to some good ones. Your paper must include the source or sources of your data. Papers which have obviously not been proofread will suffer an automatic 20% reduction in grade. Please submit 2 copies of your paper. I will keep one copy.

View the eHRAF User Guide on how to use the database.

Citing eHRAF documents

You should include a standard bibliographic reference for the material, i.e.

Appadurai, Arjun
1996 Modernity at Large: Cultural Dimensions of Globalization.
Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.

Don’t forget to include page numbers when citing material in the text! You should also include the basic retrieval statement for an on-line database: Retrieved [month day, year,] from [source] on-line database ([name of database], [item no.—if applicable]).