Book

The Navajo Mountain community: social organization and kinship terminology

University of California PressBerkeley • Published In 1970 • Pages:

By: Shepardson, Mary, Hammond, Blodwen.

Abstract
This study examines Navajo cultural flexibility and persistence as expressed by kinship terminology and social organization. Focus is on the community of Navajo Mountain, Utah, with supplementary data from Inscription House and Oljeto, Arizona. Fieldwork was sporadic, encompassing 8+ months over a period of seven years. Using Malcolm Carr Collier's 1938 research as a baseline to measure change, the researchers have divided their study into three major sections. Part One describes the community, its setting and history, and changes over the past 25 years. Part Two addresses social structure, focusing on group membership, residence, cooperation, social control, and life cycle. Particular attention is given to witchcraft, marriage, and dyadic relationships. Part Three analyzes kinship terminology and role with respect to actual behavior. Appearing throughout the volume are important data on 'clan' composition and interaction.
Subjects
Acculturation and culture contact
Sociocultural trends
Clans
Family relationships
Kin relationships
Sorcery
Regulation of marriage
Arranging a marriage
Special unions and marriages
Kinship terminology
Social control
Informal in-group justice
Chief executive
Extended families
culture
Navajo
HRAF PubDate
2004
Region
North America
Sub Region
Southwest and Basin
Document Type
Book
Evaluation
Creator Type
Ethnologist
Document Rating
5: Excellent Primary Data
Analyst
Richard A. Wagner ; 1985
Field Date
1960-1966
Coverage Date
1868-1966
Coverage Place
Navajo Reservation, Navajo Mountain, Utah; Inscription House and Oljeto, Arizona; United States
Notes
[by] Mary Shepardson and Blodwen Hammond
Clans are indexed for OCM category 614 and data on prostitution other than as an offense are indexed for OCM category 548
Includes bibliographical references (p. [263]-269)
LCCN
70097233
LCSH
Navajo Indians