Kinship and gender as political processes among the Miskitu of eastern Nicaragua / Mark Angus Jamieson (Registro nro. 37425)

MARC details
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control field OSt
005 - DATE AND TIME OF LATEST TRANSACTION
control field 20220121221436.0
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040 ## - CATALOGING SOURCE
Language of cataloging Español
Transcribing agency Biblioteca Nora Rigby
080 ## - UNIVERSAL DECIMAL CLASSIFICATION NUMBER
Universal Decimal Classification number 306.87 J271
100 ## - MAIN ENTRY--PERSONAL NAME
Personal name Jamieson, Mark Angus
9 (RLIN) 527
245 10 - TITLE STATEMENT
Title Kinship and gender as political processes among the Miskitu of eastern Nicaragua / Mark Angus Jamieson
260 ## - PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC.
Place of publication, distribution, etc. Mexico University of London
Date of publication, distribution, etc. 1995
300 ## - PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION
Extent 227 P.
504 ## - BIBLIOGRAPHY, ETC. NOTE
Bibliography, etc. note Table of contents, maps, table, graphs and bibliographic reference
520 ## - SUMMARY, ETC.
Summary, etc. This thesis is concerned with local concepts of kinship and personhood in a small Miss· illage named Kakabila in eastern Nicaragua, and examines how gender identities are orgarused around a culturally specific variant of the set of practices which anthropologists have glossed as 'bride service'. Personhood in Ka.kabila is focused on the establishment of a stable conjugal pannership. Men usually attach themselves to the households of their conjugal panners, and atternpt to legitimate their claims to their wives by uxorilocal postnuptial residence and the practice of long term brideservice. The central concem of many Ka.kabila men therefore is with demonstrating that they conduct themselves with their affines harmoniously in accordance with village ideals. For many men, ho wever, the eventual objective is to detach their wives from the influence of consanguine kin, and this produces a tension between the need to project affinal hannony and the concem that actions may be construed in terms of elopement. Kakabila women, however, tend to be much more concemed with constructing networks of symbolic exchange and mutual assistance among themselves, particularly with their consanguine! kinswomen. In many cases, therefore, women resist the attempts of husbands and sons-in-law to disrupt these networks, and organize their actions around ensuring that errant husbands and junior male affines adequately supply them with sufficient symbolic capital to adequately maintain and cultivare these networks, This thesis, therefore, suggests a very specific formulation of the logic of gender identities in Kakabila, where bride service is as much style of distribution as it is a 'sty le of conscription' (Collier and Rosaldo 1981: 27 5), based on a particular disjunction between men's and wornen's motivations. This thesis also considers the changes in Miskitu kinship in terms of changes which have taken place arming the Miskitu during the last three hundred years, particularly the marked trading and political imbalances brought about by long tern contact with the English speaking Caribbean countries. The disappearance of the historically attested distinction between cross and p3.LI e cousins and the serial exchange of offspring and siblings, and the emergence of u x ori postnuptial residence, are analyses in terms of J. gradual h1storical reformulation notions of affinity which owes a great deal to these regional contracts. An ethno ~ ~ historically informed analysis for these transformations 1s considered. why ·h m · shed light on gender identities and the practice of bride service in present da '
650 ## - SUBJECT ADDED ENTRY--TOPICAL TERM
Topical term or geographic name entry element 1. DOMESTIC REALATIONESHIP 2. CONSAN GUINITY 3. KINSHIP-GENDER-POLITICAL 4. MISKITU-EASTERN NICARUGA 5. THESIS-ANTHROPOLOGY
942 ## - ADDED ENTRY ELEMENTS (KOHA)
Koha item type Tesis y Monografías
Source of classification or shelving scheme
Existencias
Withdrawn status Lost status Source of classification or shelving scheme Damaged status Use restrictions Not for loan Collection code Home library Current library Shelving location Date acquired Inventory number Total Checkouts Full call number Barcode Date last seen Copy number Price effective from Koha item type
Disponible       Acceso restringido   Monografías / Tesis Biblioteca URACCAN, Bluefields Biblioteca URACCAN, Bluefields Staff Office 21.01.2022 0015 TMANT   0015 TMANT C1 0015 TMANT C1 21.01.2022 C1 21.01.2022 Tesis y Monografías
Disponible       Acceso restringido   Monografías / Tesis Biblioteca URACCAN, Bluefields Biblioteca URACCAN, Bluefields Staff Office 21.01.2022 0016 TMANT   0016 TMANT C2 0016 TMANT C2 21.01.2022 C2 21.01.2022 Tesis y Monografías
Disponible       Acceso restringido   Monografías / Tesis Biblioteca URACCAN, Bluefields Biblioteca URACCAN, Bluefields Staff Office 21.01.2022 0017 TMANT   0017 TMANT C3 0017 TMANT C3 21.01.2022 C3 21.01.2022 Tesis y Monografías

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