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katie
the reason for me not really going into detail with the rules and regulations with sex is because deon and me both have to write a paper and he has to write about sex and love...im just the marriage..
thanks Dalton C. Johnson
Posted:
Oct 29 2008, 8:30 PM EDT by
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Evans Wed 3:30 Evanaves
Evanave The culture of Evanave has many aspects to it, which all are intertwined. It starts with the Mediterranean climate which makes it possible for a great variety of crops to grow in Evanave. It is also by the coast
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Nov 25 2008, 10:44 PM EST by
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Monogomy Issue
Why when we are in a monogomous relationship are we having encounters with others? I just don't remember talking about that and how it fits into our cultural values.
Posted:
Apr 11 2008, 4:47 PM EDT by
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Ticos: Sex Love and Marriage
Ticos: Sex, Love, & Marriage By: Dana Strathman The Ticos are inhabited in the Tropical Rainforest, where sex, love and marriage are apart of their culture. The Ticos do believe in marriage and value it as an economic gain and using their relations
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Apr 16 2008, 10:20 PM EDT by tcowley
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Love and Marriage
Sex, Love, and Marriage in the Taiga/ Boreal Forest: Monogamy is the basis for love in the Retfa Reve culture. It is also the most common and most preferred among the people of this culture. It is this way because there has been an increase of
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Mar 11 2008, 11:14 PM EDT by kimboberly
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Sex, Love, and Marriage of the Wingape tribe
The Wingape tribe practice polygyny within their marriages. Polygyny means marrying more than one woman. Therefore, the husband has more than one wife or spouse. Also, inside the marriages, the people can marry their own cousins. The people in Winga
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Apr 17 2008, 2:33 AM EDT by ewages2
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contiuned...
More to consider:
Residence Patterns: ambilocal residence; a married couple may choose either matrilocal or patrilocal residence. divorce: adultery: rape: sexual permissiveness before marriage:
You might want to break up into the following committees:
Sex Committee: How will your culture reproduce?
What sexual taboos or restrictions will there be?
Marriage Committee: What form of marriage will be most common? Why? see above
What form of marriage will be most preferred? Why? see above
What rights and obligations will marriage establish? Sex? Labor? Property? Child rearing? Exchange? Love?
-Just looking for input since these should be group decisions about our culture. I met with the "marriage committee" during class last Thursday, so I have added what we came up with during that, as well as some of my thoughts based on what Camrin wrote about in language and gender. I don't know who was part of the "sex committee" thought, so if you were, feel free to go ahead and add what you discussed. All is open for change, I'll probably start putting this together Wed. morning.
Posted:
Mar 3 2008, 9:32 PM EST by
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Input for sex, love, marriage
Here's some topics that need to be included in the sex, love, marriage paper:
How will your culture reproduce? Reproduction is highly important in the Wanahokaloogie culture because the more children a family produces, the higher their cultural status.
What sexual taboos or restrictions will there be? (gender, time, age, incest) Incest is taboo in the Wanahokaloogie culture. This is why grandparents and parents are looked to for arranging marriages outside the clan.
What form of marriage will be most common? Monogamy is most common to keep the male/female ratio in check, but many females do prefer polygany to ease their work loads.
Monogamy, Polygyny, Polyandry, Group, Same-Sex, Cousin? In Camrin's gender paper she talked about our culture being mostly monogamous, but polygyny is also practiced because since we are a horticulture society, this would be very common since women do most of the domestic work. Same-sex marriages
What form of marriage will be most preferred? Why? polygany (see above)
What rights and obligations will marriage establish? Sex? Labor? Property? Child rearing? Exchange?
How do your answers fit in with your subsistence and exchange patterns?
Will you practice arranged marriage or love marriage? Marriages are arranged by grandparents or parents of the bride and groom. It is practice to marry outside the clan.
Will you practice brideprice, dowry, or neither? Marriage is formalized by an exchanging of gifts between families. A joining of a bride and groom is a joining of two families together, and they come to love each other greatly.
How do your answers fit in with your subsistence and exchange patterns?
Are there logical and realistic connections?
Posted:
Mar 3 2008, 9:32 PM EST by
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Love, Sex, & Marriage in Xibalba
Xibalbians, being a small, nomadic, foraging people, naturally consist of very closely-knit families and communities that are part of a larger group (yet very small relative to other cultures in the world) in the Arctic Tundra. Marriage and family p
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Apr 15 2008, 2:09 AM EDT by
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Sex, Love, and Marriage of Wanahokaloogie
What’s love, got to do, got to do with it? Not much for the Wannahokaloogie people. In this horticulture society, love is not the foundations in which relationships are built off of, but is a flame that burns (hopefully) after a couple is arranged t
Last updated:
Apr 16 2008, 5:42 PM EDT by ashelton
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