Article
A European word and concept used to describe a member, often male, although the term is often considered gender neutral, of the same genetic or relational group.
The Navajo kinship system, similar to other indigenous cultural groups, is based on clans. Because Navajo culture is matrilineal, children belong to their mother's clan, while they are born for their father's clan. For the Navajo, the idea of kinship and the extended network of clansmen is broadened by taken into consideration their maternal and paternal grandfathers' clans.
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References
References
Sturtevant, William C., and Alfonso Ortiz
1979 Handbook of North American Indians. Volume 9. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian
Institution.