Long-distance diffusion of affinal kinship terms as evidence of late holocene change in marriage systems in Aboriginal Australia

Patrick McConvell

Research output: Chapter in Book / Conference PaperChapter

Abstract

Ian Keen has made significant contributions to the comparison of Australian Aboriginal societies, and specifically to the relationship between types of marriage, kinship systems and other aspects of society and economy. He has maintained a commitment to the rigorous study of kinship systems and to comparative anthropology, or ethnology, when these orientations became unpopular in sociocultural anthropology. One of his major works (2004) systematically compared representative groups throughout Australia, emphasising how aspects of social organisation linked to economies. On a smaller scale was his brilliant study of how the scale of polygyny differed in two neighbouring areas of Arnhem Land, seeking the explanation in matrilateral cousin marriage and networks, age structures and economy (1982).
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationStrings of Connectedness: Essays in Honour of Ian Keen
EditorsPeter G. Toner
Place of PublicationActon, A.C.T.
PublisherANU Press
Pages287-315
Number of pages29
ISBN (Electronic)9781925022636
ISBN (Print)9781925022629
Publication statusPublished - 2015

Keywords

  • indigenous peoples
  • marriage
  • kinship
  • Australia

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