Australian Aboriginal kinship
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Aboriginal Australian kinship comprises the systems of Australian Aboriginal customary law, Aboriginal customary law governing social interaction relating to kinship in traditional Australian Aboriginal culture, Aboriginal cultures. It is an integral part of the culture of every List of Aboriginal Australian group names, Aboriginal group across Australia, and particularly important with regard to marriages between Aboriginal Australians, Aboriginal people.


The subsection system

Subsection systems are a unique social structure that divide all of Australian Aboriginal society into a number of groups, each of which combines particular sets of kin. In Central Australian Aboriginal English vernacular, subsections are widely known as "skins". Each subsection is given a name that can be used to refer to individual members of that group. Skin is passed down by a person's parents to their children. The name of the groups can vary. There are systems with two such groupings (these are known as 'Kinship#Lineages, clans, phratries, moieties, and matrimonial sides, moieties' in kinship studies), systems with four (sections), six and eight (subsection systems). Some language groups extend this by having distinct male and female forms, giving a total of sixteen skin names, for example the Pintupi (listed below) and Warlpiri. While membership in skin groups is ideally based on blood relations, Australian Aboriginal subsection systems are classificatory, meaning that even people who are not actual blood relations are assigned to a subsection. They are also universal, meaning that every member of the society is assigned a position in the system. Subsection systems are found in Aboriginal societies across much of Central, Western and Northern Australia. On the basis of detailed analysis and comparison of the various subsection systems and their terminologies, and in particular the apparent prefix /j-/ for male and /n-/ for female, it has been identified as a social innovation originally from the Daly River region of the Northern Territory, which then spread rapidly southwards to other groups.


Systems with two groupings (moieties)


Yolngu

The Yolngu, Yolŋu people of north-eastern Arnhem Land divide society (and much of the natural world) into two Kinship#Lineages, clans, phratries, moieties, and matrimonial sides, moieties: ''Dhuwa'' and ''Yirritja''. Each of these is represented by people of a number of different groups (each with their own lands, languages and philosophies) through their hereditary Estate (law), estates – so many things are either ''Yirritja'' or ''Dhuwa'': ::: Fish, stone, river, sea etc., belongs to one or the other moiety. Things that are not either Dhuwa or Yirritja are called ''wakinŋu''. Yolŋu also have a kinship system with eight subsections (four Dhuwa and four Yirritja which is what creates moiety).


Systems with four sections


Gamilaraay

The Gamilaraay language, Gamilaraay language group from New South Wales have a four-section system. :::


Martuthunira

The Martuthunira language, Martuthunira language group from the Pilbara region of Western Australia have a four-section system. (The spelling ''l.y'' indicates that the letters represent two distinct phonemes, and are not a digraph (orthography), digraph). ::: Similar systems are found across most language groups in the Pilbara, though with some variation in the forms of the names. For example, speakers of Ngarla language, Ngarla use ''Milangka'' where Martuthunira use ''Pal.yarri''.


Alyawarra

The Alyawarre language group from Central Australia also have a four-section system, but use different terms from the Martuthunira. :::


Systems with eight groups (subsection systems)


Lardil

The Lardil people, Lardil of Mornington Island in the Gulf of Carpentaria have eight subsection groups, shown here with some of their totems: :: Each Lardil person belongs to one of these groups. Their paternal grandfather's subsection determines their own; so a Balyarriny man or woman will have a Balyarriny grandfather. Members of each group may only marry members of one other, specified, group. Once a person's subsection group is known, their relationship to any other Lardil can be determined. A Ngarrijbalangi is a 'father' to a Bangariny, a 'father-in-law' to a Yakimarr and a 'son' to another Bangariny, either in a social sense or purely through linearship. The mechanics of the Lardil skin system means that generations of males cycle back and forth between two subsections. ''Ngarrijbalangi'' is father to ''Bangariny'' and ''Bangariny'' is father to ''Ngarrijbalangi'' and similarly for the three other pairs of subsections. Generations of women, however, cycle through four subsections before arriving back at the starting point. This means that a woman has the same subsection name as her (Matrilineality, matrilineal) great-great-grandmother.


Pintupi

The Pintupi of the Western Desert (Australia), Western Desert also have an eight-subsection system, made more complex by distinct forms for male and female subsection names; male forms begin with "Tj", the female forms with "N". The Warlpiri people, Warlpiri system is almost the same: :::


Kunwinjku

The Kunwinjku language, Kunwinjku of Arnhem Land, Western Arnhem Land have a similar system; male forms begin with "Na", the female forms with "Ngal":Etherington, Steven; Etherington, Narelle,
Kunwinjku Kunwok : a short introduction to Kunwinjku language and society
', Kunwinjku Language Centre, 1996,
::: Each person therefore has a patriline, patrimoiety and a matriline, matrimoiety, a father's and a mother's subsection group.


Extension of the system to non-relatives

Outsiders who have significant interaction with such groups may be given a 'skin name', commonly based on the people they have interacted with and the types of interaction.


Some common kinship terms used in Aboriginal English

The variety of English used by many Australian Aboriginal people employs kinship terms in ways that are based on their equivalents in Australian Aboriginal languages. *''Aunty'' and ''uncle'' are terms of address for older people, to whom the speaker may not be related. *''Brother'' and ''sister''—as well as siblings this term is used to refer to children of one's mother's sister and of father's brother (cousin), just as in many indigenous languages. *''Cousin-brother'' and ''cousin-sister'' are often used to refer to children of one's mother's sister and father's brother. *''Cousin'' refers to children of one's father's sister and mother's brother, but may be extended to any relative of one's own generation, such as one who might share the same great-grandparent, which is a second-cousin in Aboriginal terms. *In south-east Queensland, ''daughter'' is used to refer to any woman of one's great-grandparents' generation. This is due to the cyclical nature of traditional kinship systems and mirrors usage in many Australian languages. *''Father'' and ''mother'' include any relative of one's parents' generation, such as uncles, aunts, their own cousins and in-laws. *''Grandfather'' and ''grandmother'' can refer to anyone of one's grandparents' generation. ''Grandfather'' can also refer to any respected elderly man, to whom the speaker may not be related. *''Poison'' refers to a relation one is obligated to avoid. See avoidance speech. *The term ''second'', or ''little bit'' in northern Australia, is used with a distant relative who is described using a close kinship term. For example, one's ''second father'' or ''little bit father'' is a man of one's father's generation not closely related to the speaker. Usually having a ''second mother'' is having a woman of your own mother's generation who seems to act like a mother and would most likely care for you if anything were to happen to your own parents. It is contrasted with ''close'', ''near'' or ''true''. *A ''skin'' or ''skin group'' is a section determined by the skin of a person's parents, and determines whom a person is eligible to marry. *''Son'' can refer to any male of the next generation, such as nephews, just as ''daughter'' can refer to any female of the next generation, including nieces.


See also

*Noongar kin systems *Warlpiri people#Kinship, Warlpiri kinship


References


Further reading

* Binnion, Joan (1979) ''The Lardil People of Mornington Island (Student Handbook)'', Aboriginal Community College, Port Adelaide. * Dousset, Laurent, 2011, ''Australian Aboriginal Kinship: An introductory handbook with particular emphasis on the Western Desert'', Marseille, Pacific-credo Publications. * Hansen, Kenneth C. and Lesley E. Hansen, 1979, ''Pintupi/Luritja kinship'', Alice Springs, Northern Territory, Institute for Aboriginal Development.


External links


AustKin

Ausanthrop kinship tutorialAusanthrop
* {{DEFAULTSORT:Australian Aboriginal Kinship Australian Aboriginal culture, Kinship Anthropology Marriage, unions and partnerships in Australia