article

The changing role of the family in a rural Irish community

Journal of comparative family studies10 (2) • Published In 1979 • Pages: 141-162

By: Kane, Eileen.

Abstract
This is a study of a relatively poor farming village in County Galway. The basic kin unit is the kindred, which includes lineal and collateral connections. The kindred group comes together at weddings, wakes, and times of crisis. Cooperative work groups are drawn from the kindred. The author discusses kinship terminology, personal names, and nicknames. Other topics include the extended family, mother and daughter-in-law relationships, household budgets and finances, childrearing, sibling rivalry, gender relations, and old age. The author also notes changes that have occurred in the community since 1968, with the rise in tourism and establishment of an industrial estate in the area.
Subjects
Division of labor by gender
Personal names
Regulation of marriage
Household
Family relationships
Extended families
Kinship terminology
Kindreds and ramages
Community structure
culture
Rural Irish
HRAF PubDate
2016
Region
Europe
Sub Region
British Isles
Document Type
article
Evaluation
Creator Type
Ethnologist
Document Rating
5: Excellent Primary Data
Analyst
Ian Skoggard; 2014
Field Date
1973
Coverage Date
1904-1973
Coverage Place
County Galway, Connacht, Ireland
Notes
Eileen Kane
Includes bibliographical references (p. 161 - 162)
LCCN
74641687
LCSH
Ireland--Rural conditions