Gender stratification in four matrilineal societies

Includes bibliographical references (leaves 77-80) California State University, Northridge. Department of Anthropology. This thesis examines the causes of gender stratification in four matrilineal Native American societies, including the Chipewyan, Crow, Hopi, and Iroquois. Factors affecting women&#...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Harris, Kim C.
Other Authors: Morton, Keith L., Anthropology, Marti, Judith, Raab, L. Mark
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: California State University, Northridge 1998
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10211.3/177668
id ftcalifstateuniv:oai:dspace.calstate.edu:10211.3/177668
record_format openpolar
spelling ftcalifstateuniv:oai:dspace.calstate.edu:10211.3/177668 2023-05-15T15:54:14+02:00 Gender stratification in four matrilineal societies Harris, Kim C. Morton, Keith L. Anthropology Marti, Judith Raab, L. Mark 1998 http://hdl.handle.net/10211.3/177668 en eng California State University, Northridge http://hdl.handle.net/10211.3/177668 http://scholarworks.csun.edu//handle/10211.2/286 By signing and submitting this license, you the author grant permission to California State University, Northridge Graduate Studies to submit your thesis or dissertation, and any additional associated files you provide, to CSUN Scholarworks, the institutional repository of the California State University, Northridge, on your behalf.You grant to CSUN Scholarworks the non-exclusive right to reproduce and/or distribute your submission worldwide in electronic or any medium for non-commercial, academic purposes. You agree that CSUN Scholarworks may, without changing the content, translate the submission to any medium or format, as well as keep more than one copy, for the purposes of security, backup and preservation. You represent that the submission is your original work, and that you have the right to grant the rights contained in this license. You also represent that your submission does not, to the best of your knowledge, infringe upon anyone's copyright. If the submission contains material for which you do not hold copyright, or for which the intended use is not permitted, or which does not reasonably fall under the guidelines of fair use, you represent that you have obtained the unrestricted permission of the copyright owner to grant CSUN Scholarworks the rights required by this license, and that such third-party owned material is clearly identified and acknowledged within the text or content of the submission. If the submission is based upon work that has been sponsored or supported by an agency or organization other than the California State University, Northridge, you represent that you have fulfilled any right of review or other obligations required by such contract or agreement. CSUN Scholarworks will clearly identify your name(s) as the author(s) or owner(s) of the submission, and will not make any alterations, other than those allowed by this license, to your submission. Thesis 1998 ftcalifstateuniv 2022-04-13T11:31:08Z Includes bibliographical references (leaves 77-80) California State University, Northridge. Department of Anthropology. This thesis examines the causes of gender stratification in four matrilineal Native American societies, including the Chipewyan, Crow, Hopi, and Iroquois. Factors affecting women's status, such as female labor, contribution to subsistence, portrayal in mythology, and control over resources are analyzed to determine what affect, if any, these and other factors have upon gender stratification in these societies. The theories of Peggy Sanday, Ernestine Friedl, and Joyce Mccarl Nielsen relating to gender stratification and economy are evaluated using the data obtained in this study. Thesis Chipewyan California State University (CSU): DSpace
institution Open Polar
collection California State University (CSU): DSpace
op_collection_id ftcalifstateuniv
language English
description Includes bibliographical references (leaves 77-80) California State University, Northridge. Department of Anthropology. This thesis examines the causes of gender stratification in four matrilineal Native American societies, including the Chipewyan, Crow, Hopi, and Iroquois. Factors affecting women's status, such as female labor, contribution to subsistence, portrayal in mythology, and control over resources are analyzed to determine what affect, if any, these and other factors have upon gender stratification in these societies. The theories of Peggy Sanday, Ernestine Friedl, and Joyce Mccarl Nielsen relating to gender stratification and economy are evaluated using the data obtained in this study.
author2 Morton, Keith L.
Anthropology
Marti, Judith
Raab, L. Mark
format Thesis
author Harris, Kim C.
spellingShingle Harris, Kim C.
Gender stratification in four matrilineal societies
author_facet Harris, Kim C.
author_sort Harris, Kim C.
title Gender stratification in four matrilineal societies
title_short Gender stratification in four matrilineal societies
title_full Gender stratification in four matrilineal societies
title_fullStr Gender stratification in four matrilineal societies
title_full_unstemmed Gender stratification in four matrilineal societies
title_sort gender stratification in four matrilineal societies
publisher California State University, Northridge
publishDate 1998
url http://hdl.handle.net/10211.3/177668
genre Chipewyan
genre_facet Chipewyan
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10211.3/177668
op_rights http://scholarworks.csun.edu//handle/10211.2/286
By signing and submitting this license, you the author grant permission to California State University, Northridge Graduate Studies to submit your thesis or dissertation, and any additional associated files you provide, to CSUN Scholarworks, the institutional repository of the California State University, Northridge, on your behalf.You grant to CSUN Scholarworks the non-exclusive right to reproduce and/or distribute your submission worldwide in electronic or any medium for non-commercial, academic purposes. You agree that CSUN Scholarworks may, without changing the content, translate the submission to any medium or format, as well as keep more than one copy, for the purposes of security, backup and preservation. You represent that the submission is your original work, and that you have the right to grant the rights contained in this license. You also represent that your submission does not, to the best of your knowledge, infringe upon anyone's copyright. If the submission contains material for which you do not hold copyright, or for which the intended use is not permitted, or which does not reasonably fall under the guidelines of fair use, you represent that you have obtained the unrestricted permission of the copyright owner to grant CSUN Scholarworks the rights required by this license, and that such third-party owned material is clearly identified and acknowledged within the text or content of the submission. If the submission is based upon work that has been sponsored or supported by an agency or organization other than the California State University, Northridge, you represent that you have fulfilled any right of review or other obligations required by such contract or agreement. CSUN Scholarworks will clearly identify your name(s) as the author(s) or owner(s) of the submission, and will not make any alterations, other than those allowed by this license, to your submission.
_version_ 1766389398551658496