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ID194020
Title ProperKinship, double descent and gender politics amongst the Dimasas of Northeast India
LanguageENG
AuthorGogoi, Prithibi Pratibha ;  Kikhi, Kedilezo
Summary / Abstract (Note)This essay is based on ethnographic fieldwork carried out among the Dimasas (of Assam and Nagaland) in Northeastern India. This Indigenous group has a system of double descent which places them separately from the other ethnic groups in the Indian subcontinent. In double descent, lineages are drawn through both the paternal and maternal lines of descent. The existing literature suggests that studies on double descent have mostly focused on ethnic groups in Africa, while not much research has been done on Dimasas or other Indigenous groups with double descent in the region. The paper attempts to fill the gap in South Asian anthropological literature on kinship discourses by focusing on the Dimasas of Northeast India. Further, by taking gender as an analytical tool, the paper attempts to explore the complex cultural contours of the double descent system, which intricately gets subsumed within the patriarchal setup in Dimasa society.
`In' analytical NoteAsian Ethnicity Vol. 25, No.1; Jan 2024: p.104-120
Journal SourceAsian Ethnicity Vol: 25 No 1
Key WordsEthnography ;  Gender ;  Patriarchy ;  North-East India ;  Dimasas ;  Double descent


 
 
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