- Fictive kinship
Fictive kinship is the process of giving someone a
kinship title and treating them in many ways as if they had the actual kinship relationship implied by the title. People with this relationship are known as fictive kin. Fictive kinship is also known as relatedness.Fictive kinship is seen by most current anthropologists as working alongside (or within) but not replacing traditional
kinship .Janet Carsten developed the idea of "relatedness" in response toDavid M. Schneider 's 1984 work on Symbolic Kinship ("A Critique of The Study of Kinship"). Carsten developed her initial ideas from studies with the Malays in looking at what was socialized and biological. Here she uses the idea of relatedness to move away from a pre-constructed analytics opposition which exists in anthropological thought between the biological and the social (1995, "The substance of kinship and the heat of the hearth; feeding, personhood and relatedness among the Malays in Pulau Langkawi", American Ethnologist). Carsten argued that relatedness should be described in terms of indigenous statements and practices, some of which fall outside what anthropologists have conventionally understood as kinship ("Cultures of Relatedness", 2000).A noted
Gurung tradition is the institution of "Rodi" where teenagers form fictive kinship bonds and become Rodi members to socialize, perform communal tasks, and find marriage partners.In
Western culture , a person may refer to close friends of one's parents as "aunt" or "uncle" (and their children as "cousin"), or may refer to close friends as "brother" or "sister". In particular, college fraternities and sororities usually use "brother" and "sister" to refer to members of the organization.The term has such a broad usage as to suggest that it might be spurious.
Compadrazgo , common membership in a unilineal descent group, and legaladoption are among the phenomena which are described as examples of fictive kinship. An alternative standpoint would be that "either you're related or you aren't".Fictive kinship was discussed by
Jenny White in her work on female migrant workers inIstanbul ("Money Makes Us Relatives", 1995). In her work she draws on ideas of production and the women she works with being drawn together through 'webs of indebtedness' through which the women refer to each other as kin.Bibliography
*Cite book
publisher = Cambridge University Press
isbn = 0521656273
last = Carsten
first = Janet, ed.
title = Cultures of Relatedness: New Approaches to the Study of Kinship
location = Cambridge
date = 2000
*Cite journal
volume = 22
issue = 2
pages = 223–241
last = Carsten
first = Janet
title = The Substance of Kinship and the Heat of the Hearth: Feeding, Personhood, and Relatedness among Malays in Pulau Langkawi
journal = American Ethnologist
date = May, 1995
url = http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0094-0496%28199505%2922%3A2%3C223%3ATSOKAT%3E2.0.CO%3B2-X
doi = 10.1525/ae.1995.22.2.02a00010
month = May
year = 1995*Cite book
publisher = University of Michigan Press
last = Schneider
first = David M.
title = A Critique of the Study of Kinship
location = Ann Arbor, Mich.
date = 1984
oclc = 10605668*Cite book
edition = 2nd ed.
publisher = Routledge
isbn = 0203240421
last = White
first = Jenny B.
title = Money Makes Us Relatives: Women's Labor in Urban Turkey
location = New York
date = 2004See also
*
Family
*Kinship terminology External links
* [http://eclectic.ss.uci.edu/~drwhite/tlaxcala/ Social Structure and Kinship in Rural Mexico - The "Tlaxcala" Project]
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