Books about Matrilineal from Amazon.com



A Genealogist's Guide to Discovering Your Female Ancestors : Special Strategies for Uncovering Hard-To-Find Information About Your Female Lineage
Our foremothers are just as important to our family history as our forefathers After all, half of your ancestors were women! By using the valuable research techniques and sources in this book, you'll be able to uncover historical facts, personal accounts and recorded events that form an intriguing narrative biography of the women in your ancestry. .
Price: $37.90 [Notify me when price goes down.]


Filiation and Affiliation
Announcements in the 1970s and 1980s of the death of kinship and descent as subjects of anthropological study were highly premature These subjects continue routinely to be encountered in the course of empirical ethnographic research and to be reported upon in ethnographies – or they are ignored at the peril of ethnographers pathetically unprepared to deal with them. Moreover, considerable evidence has accumulated that systems of social relations built on relations of genealogical connection exhibit a remarkable degree of orderliness about which it is possible already to make a number of substantial empirical generalizations, especially about the qualities of social relations within and between groups. As the masters of the subject always stressed, kinship and political and jural organization are closely interdependent structures. In this wide-ranging theoretical and comparative-ethnographic study, Harold Scheffler demonstrates that there is a simple reason why detection of this order has been too long delayed and has given rise to more destructive than to constructive debate in social anthropology.
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Price: $2.20 [Notify me when price goes down.]


Fruit of the Motherland

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Price: $1.86 [Notify me when price goes down.]


Matrilineal Communities, Patriarchal Realities: A Feminist Nirvana Uncovered
Matrilineal Communities, Patriarchal Realities provides a path-breaking explanation of the causes, and traces both the negative and positive consequences, of female-headed households in Eastern Sri Lanka. Negative consequences revolve around female poverty, male domination, and subordination; positive consequences revolve around ways in which patriarchal relations can often be challenged and circumvented. Through a finely nuanced study of Muslim, Sinhala and Tamil households in Eastern Sri Lanka, we learn of both the commonality of patriarchal structures and economic problems in such households, as well as the differences created by ethnicities that divide them.
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Price: $23.95 [Notify me when price goes down.]


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