article

The nature of nurture

American ethnologist4 (4) • Published In 1977 • Pages: 643-662

By: Marshall, Mac.

Abstract
In this article, Marshall examines Chuuk friendship and artificial kinship ties. Among the Chuuk, sibling ties are the most important kinship relationship, although they can be frought with tension due to competition over parental love, and inheritance. Marshall examines how Chuuk create more ideal sibling-like relationships through friendships (MääRääR) and fictive kin relationships (PWIIPWI),which can be further bounded through adoption. He finds that the essential ingredient in these created relationships and in kinship,. in general, is sharing. He argues that the clear Western distinction between kinship and friendship is not bourn out in the Chuuk case.
Subjects
Friendships
Family relationships
Adoption
Kin relationships
Artificial kin relationships
Lineages
Clans
culture
Chuuk
HRAF PubDate
1998
Region
Oceania
Sub Region
Micronesia
Document Type
article
Evaluation
Creator Type
Ethnologist
Document Rating
5: Excellent Primary Data
Analyst
Ian Skoggard ; 1997
Field Date
1969-1971, 1976
Coverage Date
1969-1976
Coverage Place
Chuuk State, Federated States of Micronesia
Notes
Mac Marshall
Includes bibliographical references (p. 660-662)
LCCN
74644326
LCSH
Trukese (Micronesian people)