The Family in Various CulturesHarper & Row, 1985 - 401 sider |
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Side 10
... culture base ( number and variety of traits that made up a culture ) . Curiously , there have been approaches to equality of the sexes in cultures as diverse as those of contemporary Scandinavia and the Crow Indi- ans . Some provision ...
... culture base ( number and variety of traits that made up a culture ) . Curiously , there have been approaches to equality of the sexes in cultures as diverse as those of contemporary Scandinavia and the Crow Indi- ans . Some provision ...
Side 13
... cultural setting . Hence instead of starting with a comparison of marriage or inheritance or child care in many cultures , we shall examine in some detail the family system of one culture after another . With this holistic perspective ...
... cultural setting . Hence instead of starting with a comparison of marriage or inheritance or child care in many cultures , we shall examine in some detail the family system of one culture after another . With this holistic perspective ...
Side 319
... Culture of Poverty In the Culture - of - Poverty group , families are quite large , and adequate child care often is difficult to achieve ; additional children often are taken into the family if a close relative relinquishes parenthood ...
... Culture of Poverty In the Culture - of - Poverty group , families are quite large , and adequate child care often is difficult to achieve ; additional children often are taken into the family if a close relative relinquishes parenthood ...
Indhold
PART ONE Classical Family Types | 15 |
The Polygynous Baganda Family | 53 |
The Classical Chinese System | 69 |
Copyright | |
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adult adultery American Family Baganda barrio became behavior betrothal birth Black Family boys bride brother buffalo Cambridge Canada Canadian century ceremony Chicago child Chinese Kinship Christian Church clan colonial concubinage consanguineous couple culture daughter divorce early economic England ethnic expected family members FAMILY STRUCTURE farm father female French-Canadian functions girl Hebrews Hopi household husband and wife Ibid immigrants important individual inheritance institutions kachinas kibbutz kinship labor land living male marriage married married couple matrilineal McClelland and Stewart medieval Mexican Americans Michael Gordon mother Newfoundland nuclear family old age organization parents paterfamilias patrilocal patterns percent persons phratry polygyny relationship relatives religious responsibility role Roman romantic love sexual sister slaves social society sometimes sons status tion Toronto traditional United University Press urban usually village wedding widows wives woman women York young youth