“matrilocal” Greek peasants and a reconsideration of residence terminology1
- 1 May 1976
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in American Ethnologist
- Vol. 3 (2) , 215-226
- https://doi.org/10.1525/ae.1976.3.2.02a00030
Abstract
It has recently been suggested that peasants never consistently form matrilocal joint households. Residence data from a Greek island community seem to contradict this statement. Many of the real and apparent contradictions in residence pattern studies are due to the ambiguous and inconsistently utilized terminology. A nomenclature system proposed by Pedro Carrasco (1963) is employed in order to present the Greek data precisely and unambiguously.This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Social Process in the Italian Alps1American Anthropologist, 1973
- The Conditions Favoring Matrilocal Versus Patrilocal ResidenceAmerican Anthropologist, 1971
- De Facto Families and De Jure Households in Ondo1American Anthropologist, 1971
- A Refinement of the Concept of Household: Families, Co‐residence, and Domestic Functions1American Anthropologist, 1967
- A Note on Nuer ResidenceAmerican Anthropologist, 1963
- The Locality Referent in Residence TermsAmerican Anthropologist, 1963
- “parenticipient” and other “‐cipient” compounds: a suggested terminology for a residence pattern1American Anthropologist, 1962
- Marriage and Residential ContinuityAmerican Anthropologist, 1960
- An Alternate Residence ClassificationAmerican Anthropologist, 1957
- VIRILOCAL AND UXORILOCALAmerican Anthropologist, 1947