Deck 10: Marriage and the Family

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Question
Children of a Nandi female-female marriage will name __________ as their father.

A) the woman who has the role of husband
B) their biological father
C) the woman who has the role of wife
D) their maternal uncle
Use Space or
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Question
Some polygynous societies try to reduce competition by practicing sororal polygyny, which is when the co-wives are __________.

A) sisters
B) good friends
C) of similar temperament
D) of very different ages
Question
Same-sex marriages are __________.

A) not typical in any known society
B) prohibited in all societies
C) fairly common in some societies
D) the norm in a few societies
Question
In what modern nation might you still find the practice of dowry?

A) Italy
B) England
C) Germany
D) Spain
Question
Why do anthropologists hold that families are universal?

A) All societies have parent-child groups.
B) The nuclear family is the ideal in all cultures.
C) All known societies have laws protecting families.
D) Children are revered in all cultures.
Question
Societies that practice dowry tend to be those in which __________.

A) women contribute little to primary subsistence
B) men may be married to more than one woman at a time
C) there is a shortage of desirable husbands
D) there is little social stratification
Question
Bride price occurs all over the world but is particularly common in __________.

A) Africa
B) East Asia
C) Europe D_ South America
Question
In which society did people not marry, but rather lived their whole lives in a residential group made up of maternal kin?

A) Na
B) Subanun
C) Kwakiutl
D) Hadza
Question
Why are young people's attitudes toward marriage now changing among the Na of China?

A) Young people face social pressure in schools.
B) Government initiatives are effectively changing the practice of sese.
C) There is a lack of marriageable women.
D) Economic hardship is forcing young people into Western-style marriages.
Question
Of the following forms of marriage, the rarest is __________.

A) polyandry
B) monogamy
C) the levirate
D) polygyny
Question
To whom are the goods first transferred in an indirect dowry?

A) the bride's father
B) the groom's father
C) the groom
D) the chief
Question
In the United States, what proportion of women under the age of 45 report living together while unmarried?

A) more than half
B) one-quarter
C) one-third
D) one in 10
Question
In which societies are ceremonial expressions of aggression a common part of the marriage ritual?

A) societies where the two sets of kin are actual or potential rivals
B) communities where women have very low social status
C) cultures that have been engaged in warfare for many years
D) groups in which pastoralism and territoriality are common
Question
In many Western countries there has been a dramatic increase recently in the percentage of one-parent families. What factor is correlated with an increase in single-parent households?

A) male unemployment
B) female age at first birth
C) male health
D) female education
Question
Which of the following is the most common economic marriage transaction cross-culturally?

A) bride price
B) bride service
C) indirect dowry
D) gift exchange
Question
What is a common element in ceremonies marking the onset of marriage?

A) feasting
B) fortune-telling
C) meditation
D) isolation
Question
What was the most common motivation for adoption among Samoans during Melvin Ember's fieldwork?

A) A child's natural family needed help to feed and care for him/her.
B) Families who adopted children benefit from social programs.
C) Natural disasters such as hurricanes killed many young children.
D) New family members were needed to perform all of the necessary chores.
Question
In which group were incestuous marriages permitted?

A) the ancient Egyptian royal families
B) the Nuer of East Africa
C) the Nambikwara Indians of Brazil
D) the Brahmin caste of India
Question
Societies that practice bride exchange tend to __________.

A) depend on a relatively high contribution of women to primary subsistence
B) have a high level of social stratification and a low status for women
C) arrange marriages as lifelong contracts between rival kin groups
D) require a long period of bride service before the marriage takes place
Question
In what situation did Azande warriors traditionally take on "boy-wives"?

A) when they could not afford wives
B) if no suitable women were available
C) when the warriors were away in battle
D) any time the women were menstruating and sexually unavailable
Question
Among the Chukchee, the custom of levirate is __________.

A) seen as more of an obligation than a right
B) considered a privilege offered only to highly esteemed men
C) the most common form of marriage
D) a dying tradition, with only a few such marriages each year
Question
What example from the Japanese in the 1950s and 1960s could be employed to relieve some of the financial pressure on Social Security in the United States?

A) extended family living
B) having more children
C) accumulating more wealth in one's lifetime
D) private investment of Social Security funds
Question
Most societies __________.

A) disapprove of marriages between first cousins
B) encourage marriages between parallel cousins
C) encourage marriages between first cousins
D) encourage marriages between cross-cousins
Question
While they say they would prefer a "love marriage," why do many South Asian immigrants in the United States and the United Kingdom ultimately have an arranged marriage?

A) They prefer to meet and marry someone of their own religious or ethnic background.
B) Many parents threaten to disown their children if they refuse an arranged marriage.
C) Arranged marriages allow them to maintain their citizenship in their home countries.
D) The economic outcomes of arranged marriages are much higher than in love marriages.
Question
What is the prevailing family type in over half of all societies known to anthropologists?

A) extended family
B) independent family
C) nuclear family
D) solitary family
Question
The childhood-familiarity theory also implies that first-cousin marriages should be prohibited in __________.

A) societies in which cousins grow up together in the same community
B) all societies
C) societies in which cousins live in distant villages
D) only those societies with a very small reproductive pool
Question
In what type of societies are extended-family households found most frequently?

A) sedentary agricultural economies
B) post-industrial Western societies
C) semi-nomadic herding cultures
D) traveling food collector bands
Question
The U.S. custom of the bride's family paying for the wedding is most similar to which type of marital exchange?

A) dowry
B) bride service
C) bride price
D) gift exchange
Question
Which of the following explanations for the universality of marriage has the most support from the ethnographic record and comparative animal studies?

A) postpartum requirements
B) prolonged infant dependency
C) sexual competition
D) gender division of labor
Question
A long postpartum sex taboo is most likely to occur in societies __________.

A) where people depend on crops that are low in protein
B) with a high proportion of monogamous marriages
C) where there are more males than females
D) that practice polyandrous marriage
Question
In which of the following societies would polygyny be least likely to occur?

A) a society with a balanced sex ratio
B) a culture with a long postpartum sex taboo
C) a population suffering from a high male mortality rate in warfare
D) a society with more women than men
Question
Which of the following societies is most likely to practice bride service?

A) Native American foragers
B) African agriculturalists
C) Asian horticulturalists
D) European industrialists
Question
Which theory suggests that the incest taboo was created to ensure that individuals would marry members of other families, thereby creating ties that held communities together?

A) White and Lévi-Strauss's cooperation theory
B) Westermarck's childhood-familiarity theory
C) Malinowski's family-disruption theory
D) Freud's psychoanalytic theory
Question
Couples raised together as children following the Chinese tradition of "daughter-in-law raised from childhood" are __________.

A) more likely to get divorced
B) more likely to have many children
C) less likely to seek extramarital sexual relationships
D) less likely to exchange dowry or bride price
Question
The custom of allowing a man to marry more than one woman is __________.

A) found in most of the societies known to anthropology
B) found in only a small minority of the world's societies
C) unlikely to engender jealousy among co-wives
D) strictly forbidden in Muslim society
Question
Which of the following is an example of an exogamous marriage tradition?

A) marrying outside of a particular kin group
B) marrying a member of your own caste
C) marrying someone from within the village
D) marrying with the intent to produce a male heir
Question
One study compared the health of children born of familial incest with children of the same mother born of nonincestuous unions and found that __________.

A) the incestuous group had much higher rates of genetic abnormalities than the nonincestuous group
B) both groups of children had high rates of genetic abnormalities
C) the nonincestuous group had much higher rates of genetic abnormalities than the incestuous group
D) neither group of children had high rates of genetic abnormalities
Question
A single mother and her son, living together, would be an example of a(n) __________ family.

A) independent
B) extended
C) nuclear
D) solitary
Question
Caste societies typically have __________ marriages.

A) endogamous
B) exogamous
C) cross-cousin
D) incestuous
Question
Many societies around the world, including the Chippewa, regard cross-cousins as suitable marriage partners. In these cultures, whom would you be allowed to marry?

A) your father's sister's child
B) your father's brother's child
C) your mother's sister's child
D) your mother's daughter's child
Question
Why does sexual competition appear to be higher among humans than other primates?

A) Unlike most other primates, human females are sexually receptive throughout the year.
B) Humans are more likely than other primates to live in multi-male, multi-female social groups.
C) Humans are particularly aggressive primates and more likely to compete through physical means.
D) There is a lower female to male ratio in human communities than in most other primate groups.
Question
How has the tradition of arranged marriage changed in recent years?

A) Marriages are still arranged by families, but couples have more say in the pairing.
B) Arranged marriages are now big business and performed mostly by professional matchmakers.
C) Marriages are only arranged when very large dowries are involved.
D) Arranged marriage is now illegal in nearly all countries.
Question
Relate the concept of the extended family to the different forms of marriage discussed in the chapter (monogamy, polygyny, and polyandry). What might an extended family look like in each of these marital systems?
Question
What two major factors do all forms of marriage consider?

A) sexual and economic
B) economic and land-ownership
C) economic and kinship
D) sexual and kinship
Question
The incest taboo is possibly the closest thing anthropologists have found to a true "cultural universal," because some form of the taboo exists in all known societies. Why is this so important to people cross-culturally? Explain the various theories for the existence of a worldwide incest taboo.
Question
The fact that people who are brought up together on the same kibbutz are uninterested in each other as marriage partners, even when the marriages are favored by their parents, supports which theory of the incest taboo?

A) the childhood-familiarity theory
B) the cooperation theory
C) the family-disruption theory
D) Freud's Oedipal theory
Question
Even in the United States-an urbanized society with relatively few marriage restrictions-people tend to marry within their __________.

A) class and geographic area
B) geographic area and educational level
C) educational level and profession
D) profession and class
Question
Which condition predicts a discouragement of romantic love as a basis for marriage?

A) the husband and wife live in an extended-family household
B) there is relatively little sexual freedom for either spouse
C) both partners are needed to make significant contributions to primary subsistence
D) one of the primary goals of marriage is to produce children
Question
Write a definition of marriage that would embrace all known forms of marriage recognized by anthropologists. In other words, what factors do these diverse unions have in common?
Question
Which of the following statements is true of the relationship between family and household?

A) In simpler societies, the family and household are indistinguishable, but in more complex societies they may diverge.
B) In complex societies, the family and household are indistinguishable, but in simpler societies they may diverge.
C) In simpler societies, the family is always bigger than the household, but in more complex societies they are of comparable size.
D) In complex societies, the family is always bigger than the household, but in simpler societies they are of comparable size.
Question
What is the primary weakness of both the gender division-of-labor and prolonged-infant-dependency models for the benefits of marriage?

A) There are many ways other than marriage for groups of men and women to work together.
B) Marriage seems to be much older than the typical division of labor by gender found today.
C) The division of labor around childcare responsibilities is only found in a few cultures.
D) Many species have a longer infant dependency than humans and get by without marriage.
Question
What factor predicts male-female bonding among birds and mammals?

A) whether or not a female can simultaneously provide for herself and her babies
B) greater female sexuality and higher levels of male competition
C) an extended infant dependency period
D) a gendered division of labor between food gathering and defending a home territory
Question
Many Westerners view the practices of dowry, bride wealth, and bride service to be about "buying" a wife. Explain why this is an inaccurate description of economic marriage transactions. What is the purpose of such economic exchanges between families?
Question
Which of the following factors are most responsible for the return of extended-family households among American communities?

A) economic hardship coupled with a rising divorce rate
B) religious fundamentalism and a return to traditional values
C) population pressure and the associated housing crisis
D) young adults remain in the home longer, but have their own children earlier
Question
If some form of male-female marriage is nearly universal, it is reasonable to believe that it is in some way adaptive. Discuss the various theories for why marriage is nearly universal, and explain which idea you feel offers the strongest explanation.
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Deck 10: Marriage and the Family
1
Children of a Nandi female-female marriage will name __________ as their father.

A) the woman who has the role of husband
B) their biological father
C) the woman who has the role of wife
D) their maternal uncle
the woman who has the role of husband
2
Some polygynous societies try to reduce competition by practicing sororal polygyny, which is when the co-wives are __________.

A) sisters
B) good friends
C) of similar temperament
D) of very different ages
sisters
3
Same-sex marriages are __________.

A) not typical in any known society
B) prohibited in all societies
C) fairly common in some societies
D) the norm in a few societies
not typical in any known society
4
In what modern nation might you still find the practice of dowry?

A) Italy
B) England
C) Germany
D) Spain
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 55 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
Why do anthropologists hold that families are universal?

A) All societies have parent-child groups.
B) The nuclear family is the ideal in all cultures.
C) All known societies have laws protecting families.
D) Children are revered in all cultures.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 55 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
Societies that practice dowry tend to be those in which __________.

A) women contribute little to primary subsistence
B) men may be married to more than one woman at a time
C) there is a shortage of desirable husbands
D) there is little social stratification
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 55 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Bride price occurs all over the world but is particularly common in __________.

A) Africa
B) East Asia
C) Europe D_ South America
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 55 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
In which society did people not marry, but rather lived their whole lives in a residential group made up of maternal kin?

A) Na
B) Subanun
C) Kwakiutl
D) Hadza
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 55 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
Why are young people's attitudes toward marriage now changing among the Na of China?

A) Young people face social pressure in schools.
B) Government initiatives are effectively changing the practice of sese.
C) There is a lack of marriageable women.
D) Economic hardship is forcing young people into Western-style marriages.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 55 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
Of the following forms of marriage, the rarest is __________.

A) polyandry
B) monogamy
C) the levirate
D) polygyny
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 55 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
To whom are the goods first transferred in an indirect dowry?

A) the bride's father
B) the groom's father
C) the groom
D) the chief
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 55 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
In the United States, what proportion of women under the age of 45 report living together while unmarried?

A) more than half
B) one-quarter
C) one-third
D) one in 10
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 55 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
In which societies are ceremonial expressions of aggression a common part of the marriage ritual?

A) societies where the two sets of kin are actual or potential rivals
B) communities where women have very low social status
C) cultures that have been engaged in warfare for many years
D) groups in which pastoralism and territoriality are common
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 55 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
In many Western countries there has been a dramatic increase recently in the percentage of one-parent families. What factor is correlated with an increase in single-parent households?

A) male unemployment
B) female age at first birth
C) male health
D) female education
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 55 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
Which of the following is the most common economic marriage transaction cross-culturally?

A) bride price
B) bride service
C) indirect dowry
D) gift exchange
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 55 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
What is a common element in ceremonies marking the onset of marriage?

A) feasting
B) fortune-telling
C) meditation
D) isolation
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 55 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
What was the most common motivation for adoption among Samoans during Melvin Ember's fieldwork?

A) A child's natural family needed help to feed and care for him/her.
B) Families who adopted children benefit from social programs.
C) Natural disasters such as hurricanes killed many young children.
D) New family members were needed to perform all of the necessary chores.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 55 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
In which group were incestuous marriages permitted?

A) the ancient Egyptian royal families
B) the Nuer of East Africa
C) the Nambikwara Indians of Brazil
D) the Brahmin caste of India
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 55 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
Societies that practice bride exchange tend to __________.

A) depend on a relatively high contribution of women to primary subsistence
B) have a high level of social stratification and a low status for women
C) arrange marriages as lifelong contracts between rival kin groups
D) require a long period of bride service before the marriage takes place
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 55 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
In what situation did Azande warriors traditionally take on "boy-wives"?

A) when they could not afford wives
B) if no suitable women were available
C) when the warriors were away in battle
D) any time the women were menstruating and sexually unavailable
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 55 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
Among the Chukchee, the custom of levirate is __________.

A) seen as more of an obligation than a right
B) considered a privilege offered only to highly esteemed men
C) the most common form of marriage
D) a dying tradition, with only a few such marriages each year
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 55 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
What example from the Japanese in the 1950s and 1960s could be employed to relieve some of the financial pressure on Social Security in the United States?

A) extended family living
B) having more children
C) accumulating more wealth in one's lifetime
D) private investment of Social Security funds
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 55 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
Most societies __________.

A) disapprove of marriages between first cousins
B) encourage marriages between parallel cousins
C) encourage marriages between first cousins
D) encourage marriages between cross-cousins
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 55 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
While they say they would prefer a "love marriage," why do many South Asian immigrants in the United States and the United Kingdom ultimately have an arranged marriage?

A) They prefer to meet and marry someone of their own religious or ethnic background.
B) Many parents threaten to disown their children if they refuse an arranged marriage.
C) Arranged marriages allow them to maintain their citizenship in their home countries.
D) The economic outcomes of arranged marriages are much higher than in love marriages.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 55 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
What is the prevailing family type in over half of all societies known to anthropologists?

A) extended family
B) independent family
C) nuclear family
D) solitary family
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 55 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
The childhood-familiarity theory also implies that first-cousin marriages should be prohibited in __________.

A) societies in which cousins grow up together in the same community
B) all societies
C) societies in which cousins live in distant villages
D) only those societies with a very small reproductive pool
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 55 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
In what type of societies are extended-family households found most frequently?

A) sedentary agricultural economies
B) post-industrial Western societies
C) semi-nomadic herding cultures
D) traveling food collector bands
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 55 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
The U.S. custom of the bride's family paying for the wedding is most similar to which type of marital exchange?

A) dowry
B) bride service
C) bride price
D) gift exchange
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 55 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
Which of the following explanations for the universality of marriage has the most support from the ethnographic record and comparative animal studies?

A) postpartum requirements
B) prolonged infant dependency
C) sexual competition
D) gender division of labor
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 55 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
A long postpartum sex taboo is most likely to occur in societies __________.

A) where people depend on crops that are low in protein
B) with a high proportion of monogamous marriages
C) where there are more males than females
D) that practice polyandrous marriage
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 55 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
In which of the following societies would polygyny be least likely to occur?

A) a society with a balanced sex ratio
B) a culture with a long postpartum sex taboo
C) a population suffering from a high male mortality rate in warfare
D) a society with more women than men
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 55 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
Which of the following societies is most likely to practice bride service?

A) Native American foragers
B) African agriculturalists
C) Asian horticulturalists
D) European industrialists
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 55 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
Which theory suggests that the incest taboo was created to ensure that individuals would marry members of other families, thereby creating ties that held communities together?

A) White and Lévi-Strauss's cooperation theory
B) Westermarck's childhood-familiarity theory
C) Malinowski's family-disruption theory
D) Freud's psychoanalytic theory
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 55 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
Couples raised together as children following the Chinese tradition of "daughter-in-law raised from childhood" are __________.

A) more likely to get divorced
B) more likely to have many children
C) less likely to seek extramarital sexual relationships
D) less likely to exchange dowry or bride price
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 55 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
The custom of allowing a man to marry more than one woman is __________.

A) found in most of the societies known to anthropology
B) found in only a small minority of the world's societies
C) unlikely to engender jealousy among co-wives
D) strictly forbidden in Muslim society
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 55 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
Which of the following is an example of an exogamous marriage tradition?

A) marrying outside of a particular kin group
B) marrying a member of your own caste
C) marrying someone from within the village
D) marrying with the intent to produce a male heir
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 55 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
One study compared the health of children born of familial incest with children of the same mother born of nonincestuous unions and found that __________.

A) the incestuous group had much higher rates of genetic abnormalities than the nonincestuous group
B) both groups of children had high rates of genetic abnormalities
C) the nonincestuous group had much higher rates of genetic abnormalities than the incestuous group
D) neither group of children had high rates of genetic abnormalities
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 55 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
A single mother and her son, living together, would be an example of a(n) __________ family.

A) independent
B) extended
C) nuclear
D) solitary
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 55 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
Caste societies typically have __________ marriages.

A) endogamous
B) exogamous
C) cross-cousin
D) incestuous
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 55 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
Many societies around the world, including the Chippewa, regard cross-cousins as suitable marriage partners. In these cultures, whom would you be allowed to marry?

A) your father's sister's child
B) your father's brother's child
C) your mother's sister's child
D) your mother's daughter's child
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 55 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
Why does sexual competition appear to be higher among humans than other primates?

A) Unlike most other primates, human females are sexually receptive throughout the year.
B) Humans are more likely than other primates to live in multi-male, multi-female social groups.
C) Humans are particularly aggressive primates and more likely to compete through physical means.
D) There is a lower female to male ratio in human communities than in most other primate groups.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 55 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
42
How has the tradition of arranged marriage changed in recent years?

A) Marriages are still arranged by families, but couples have more say in the pairing.
B) Arranged marriages are now big business and performed mostly by professional matchmakers.
C) Marriages are only arranged when very large dowries are involved.
D) Arranged marriage is now illegal in nearly all countries.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 55 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
43
Relate the concept of the extended family to the different forms of marriage discussed in the chapter (monogamy, polygyny, and polyandry). What might an extended family look like in each of these marital systems?
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 55 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
44
What two major factors do all forms of marriage consider?

A) sexual and economic
B) economic and land-ownership
C) economic and kinship
D) sexual and kinship
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 55 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
45
The incest taboo is possibly the closest thing anthropologists have found to a true "cultural universal," because some form of the taboo exists in all known societies. Why is this so important to people cross-culturally? Explain the various theories for the existence of a worldwide incest taboo.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 55 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
46
The fact that people who are brought up together on the same kibbutz are uninterested in each other as marriage partners, even when the marriages are favored by their parents, supports which theory of the incest taboo?

A) the childhood-familiarity theory
B) the cooperation theory
C) the family-disruption theory
D) Freud's Oedipal theory
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 55 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
47
Even in the United States-an urbanized society with relatively few marriage restrictions-people tend to marry within their __________.

A) class and geographic area
B) geographic area and educational level
C) educational level and profession
D) profession and class
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 55 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
48
Which condition predicts a discouragement of romantic love as a basis for marriage?

A) the husband and wife live in an extended-family household
B) there is relatively little sexual freedom for either spouse
C) both partners are needed to make significant contributions to primary subsistence
D) one of the primary goals of marriage is to produce children
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49
Write a definition of marriage that would embrace all known forms of marriage recognized by anthropologists. In other words, what factors do these diverse unions have in common?
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50
Which of the following statements is true of the relationship between family and household?

A) In simpler societies, the family and household are indistinguishable, but in more complex societies they may diverge.
B) In complex societies, the family and household are indistinguishable, but in simpler societies they may diverge.
C) In simpler societies, the family is always bigger than the household, but in more complex societies they are of comparable size.
D) In complex societies, the family is always bigger than the household, but in simpler societies they are of comparable size.
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51
What is the primary weakness of both the gender division-of-labor and prolonged-infant-dependency models for the benefits of marriage?

A) There are many ways other than marriage for groups of men and women to work together.
B) Marriage seems to be much older than the typical division of labor by gender found today.
C) The division of labor around childcare responsibilities is only found in a few cultures.
D) Many species have a longer infant dependency than humans and get by without marriage.
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52
What factor predicts male-female bonding among birds and mammals?

A) whether or not a female can simultaneously provide for herself and her babies
B) greater female sexuality and higher levels of male competition
C) an extended infant dependency period
D) a gendered division of labor between food gathering and defending a home territory
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53
Many Westerners view the practices of dowry, bride wealth, and bride service to be about "buying" a wife. Explain why this is an inaccurate description of economic marriage transactions. What is the purpose of such economic exchanges between families?
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54
Which of the following factors are most responsible for the return of extended-family households among American communities?

A) economic hardship coupled with a rising divorce rate
B) religious fundamentalism and a return to traditional values
C) population pressure and the associated housing crisis
D) young adults remain in the home longer, but have their own children earlier
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55
If some form of male-female marriage is nearly universal, it is reasonable to believe that it is in some way adaptive. Discuss the various theories for why marriage is nearly universal, and explain which idea you feel offers the strongest explanation.
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