article

The role of kinship in the transmission of national culture to rural villages in mainland Greece

American anthropologist61 • Published In 1959 • Pages: 30-38

By: Friedl, Ernestine.

Abstract
In this study, the author has attempted to show how the role of kinship in Greece acts as a mechanism for maintaining rural-urban connections, and how this mechanism continues to function despite any upward mobility changes on the part of the Greek peasant. This paper tries to point up the particular significance of kinship in the intricate network of group relations between rural and urban areas of Greece and to show the process by which, at least in the area of the village of Vasilika, where the author did her fieldwork, the 'elite' are quite often likely to be one's own relations. This source, which is based on the author's 1955-1956 fieldwork, is a revised version of a paper prepared for a symposium on European peasant cultures held at the annual meeting of the American Anthropological Association at Chicago in December 1957.
Subjects
Urban and rural life
Status, role, and prestige
Social relationships and groups
Visiting and hospitality
Family relationships
Kin relationships
culture
Greeks
HRAF PubDate
2003
Region
Europe
Sub Region
Southeastern Europe
Document Type
article
Evaluation
Creator Type
Ethnologist
Document Rating
5: Excellent Primary Data
Analyst
John Beierle ; 1965-1966
Field Date
1955-1956
Coverage Date
not specified
Coverage Place
Vasilika, Greece
Notes
Ernestine Friedl
Includes bibliographical references (p. 37-38)
LCCN
17015424
LCSH
Greece