NA-DENE. Allen, Wayne Athabascan Matriliny and Trade in Canada and Alaska. M. A. thesis. McMaster University, Hamilton, ONT

GENERAL NA-DENE Allen, Wayne. 1971. Athabascan Matriliny and Trade in Canada and Alaska. M. A. thesis. McMaster University, Hamilton, ONT. Jarvenpa, ...
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NA-DENE Allen, Wayne. 1971. Athabascan Matriliny and Trade in Canada and Alaska. M. A. thesis. McMaster University, Hamilton, ONT. Jarvenpa, Robert. 2004. Silot’ine: An Insurance Perspective on Northern Dene Kinship Networks in Recent History. Journal of Anthropological Research 60 (2): 153-178. McClellan, Catharine. 1975. My Old People Say: An Ethnographic Survey of Southern Yukon Territory. Quebec: Canadian Museum of Civilization. [Pp. 401-438: Tagish, Inland Tlingit and Southern Tutchone kin terminologies and behavior.] HAVE Review: MacLachlan 1978. Moore, Patrick. 1999. Na-Dene. In Encyclopedia of Canada’s Peoples, edited by Paul R. Magocsi. Pp. 79-89. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. [P. 82-83: “Kinship and Family.”] Perry, Richard J. 1991. Western Apache Heritage: People of the Mountain Corridor. Austin: University of Texas Press. [Especially pp. 209-228: “Distribution Summary of Clustered Cultural Features Associated with the Nature of Interpersonal Relationships among EyakAthapascan Populations.”] Reviews: Fisher V. 1992; Iverson 1992; Jett 1993; Wood J. 1993; Rushforth 1994; Snipp 1994. Pinnow, Heinz-Jürgen. HAVE 1988. Verwandtschafts- und andere Personenbezeichnungen im Tlingit and Haida: Versuch ihrer sprachhistorischen Deutung. Nortorf. (Abhandlungen der völkerkundlichen Arbeitsgemeinschaft 62). [Cross-listed in HAIDA.] Rubel, Paula G., and Abraham Rosman. 1983. The Evolution of Exchange Structures and Ranking: Some Northwest Coast and Athapascan Examples. Journal of Anthropological Research 39 (1): 1-25. EYAK Birket-Smith, Kaj, and Frederica de Laguna. 1938. The Eyak Indians of the Copper River Delta, Alaska. København: Levin & Numksgaard. [Pp. 565-571: kinship terminology.] HAVE Reviews: Gates R. 1939; Lantis 1941; Spier 1943. TLINKIT De Laguna, Frederica. 1990. Tlingit. In Handbook of North American Indians. Vol. 7. Northwest Coast, edited by Wayne Suttles. Pp. 203-228. Washington: Smithsonian Institution. [P. 216: “Kinship.”]

Emmons, George Th. 1991. The Tlingit Indians, edited with additions by Frederica de Laguna, and a biography by Jean Low. Seattle and London: University of Washington Press; New York: American Museum of Natural History. [Pp. 27-31: kin terminology and the phratry system.] HAVE Review: Cruikshank 1994. McClellan, Catharine. HAVE 1954. The Interrelations of Social Structure with Northern Tlingit Ceremonialism. Southwestern Journal of Anthropology 10 (1): 75-96. [The role of kin groupings in Tlingit cereminialism.] Naish, Constance, and Gillian Story. 1963. English-Tlingit Dictionary: Nouns. Fairbanks, Alaska: Summer Institute of Linguistics. [Pp. 64-66: kin terms.] HAVE Oberg, Kalervo. 1973. The Social Economy of the Tlingit Indians. Ph.D. dissertation. University of Chicago. 170 P. Oberg, Kalervo. 1973. The Social Economy of the Tlingit Indians. Foreword by Wilson Duff. Seattle and Washington: University of Washington Press. 146 P. [Pp. 23-52: social organization and kinship.] HAVE Reviews: Bosch 1973; Worl 1975. Olson, R. L. 1967. Social Structure and Social Life of the Tlingit Indians. University of California, Anthropological Records 26: 1-123. [Especially pp. 13-17: kinship system, usages, teknonymy, kin attitudes.] Swanton, John R. 1908. Social Condition, Beliefs, and Linguistic Relationship of the Tlingit Indians. In 26th Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1904-1905. Pp. 391-512. Washington: Government Printing Office. [Pp. 423-425: kin terminology.] ATHABASCAN GENERAL Aberle, David F. 1984. The Language Family as a Field for Historical Reconstruction. Journal of Anthropological Research 40 (1): 129-136. [Cross-listed in THEORY.]

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Asch, Michael I. 1980. Steps Towards the Analysis of Athapascan Social Organization. Arctic Anthropology 17 (2): 46-51. Dyen, Isidore, and David F. Aberle. 1974. Lexical Reconstruction: The Case of the Proto-Athapaskan Kinship System. London and New York: Cambridge University Press. 498 P.

Reviews: Kuper 1975; Lang 1975; Campbell 1976; Kinkade 1977; Wurm 1977; McElhanon 1978; Howren 1979; Landar 1979. Reply: Dyen & Aberle 1977. Fathauer, George H. HAVE 1942. Social Organization and Kinship of the Northern Athabascan Indians. M.A. thesis. Chicago: University of Chicago. Hoijer, Harry. 1956. Athapascan Kinship Systems. American Anthropologist 58 (2): 309-333.

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Hymes, Dell H., and Harold E. Driver. HAVE 1958. Concerning the Proto-Athapascan Kinship System. American Anthropologist 60 (1, pt. 1): 152-155. Ives, John W. 1985. Northern Athapaskan Social and Economic Variability. Ph.D. dissertation. University of Michigan. 379 P. Ives, John W. 1990. A Theory of Northern Athabascan Prehistory. Boulder and San Francisco: Westview Press; Calgary, Alberta: University of Calgary Press. Reviews: Le Blanc 1992; Simeone 1992; Désveaux 1995. Krech, Shepard III. HAVE 1978. Disease, Starvation, and Northern Athapaskan Social Organization. American Ethnologist 5 (4): 710-732. [The aboriginality of matrilocality in the Subarctic and its loss under demographic pressures.] Krech, Shepard III. HAVE 1980. Northern Athapaskan Ethnology in the 1970. Annual Review of Anthropology 9: 83-100. Kroeber, Alfred L. 1937. Athabascan Kin Term Systems. American Anthropologist 39 (4, pt. 1): 602-608. Reprinted in: The Nature of Culture, by A. L. Kroeber. Pp. 206-209. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Perry, Richard J. HAVE 1989. Matrilineal Descent in a Hunting Context: The Athapaskan Case. Ethnology 28 (1): 33-51. Scollon, Ronald. HAVE 1975. Athapascan Kinship: Still an Open Question. University of Hawaii Working Papers in Linguistics 7 (3): 9-16. White, Charles B. HAVE 1957. A Comparison of Theories on Southern Athapascan Kinship Systems. American Anthropologist 59 (3): 434-448. White, Charles B.

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1958. Rejoinder. American Anthropologist 60 (1, pt. 1): 155-156. CALIFORNIA Driver, Harold E. 1942. Culture Element Distributions: VI. Southern Sierra Nevada. University of California Publications in Anthropological Records 1 (2): 53-154. [P. 88-89: marriage, kinship avoidances; 145: Yokuts Kocheyali kin terms.] Essene, Frank. 1942. Culture Element Distributions: XXI. Round Valley. University of California Publications in Anthropological Records 8 (1): 1-97. [P. 31: kinship avoidances (Wailaki, Lassik, Kato).] Golla, Victor K. HAVE 1964. An Etymological Study of Hupa Noun Stems. International Journal of American Linguistics 30 (2): 108-117. [Extensive data on kin terms.] Golla, Victor. 1976. Tututni (Oregon Athapaskan). International Journal of American Linguistics 42 (3): 217-227. [P 221: inalienable possession (kin terms and body parts).] Golla, Victor K. HAVE 1998. The Earliest Recording of Pacific Coast Athabascan. Newsletter of the Society for the Study of the Indigenous Languages of the Americas 17 (1): 8-9. [A Tututni kin term in the manuscript diary of Dr. Archibald Menzies (1790-1795).] Hoijer, Harry. 1966. Galice Athapaskan: A Grammatical Sketch. International Journal of American Linguistics 32 (4): 320-327. [P. 322: kinship possession.] Nomland, Gladys A. 1935. Sinkyone Notes. University of California Publications in American Archaeology and Ethnology 36 (2): 149-178. [Pp. 159-160: family, genealogies, kinship taboos, marriage.] Kroeber, Alfred L. 1967. Goddard’s California Athabascan Texts. International Journal of American Linguistics 33 (4): 269-275. [Pp. 272-273: observations on kin terms in Californian Athabascan dialects.] Nomland, Gladys A. 1938. Bear River Ethnography. University of California Publications in Anthropological Records 2 (2): 91-124. [Closely related to Mattole; Pp. 103-104: kinship and social organization.] The Tolowa Language. Arcata, CA: In cooperation with The Center for Community Development, Humboldt State University, 1983. [Pp. 99-100: kin terms.] HAVE NORTHERN GENERAL Kari, James M.

HAVE

1977. Linguistic Diffusion between Tanaina and Ahtna. International Journal of American Linguistics 43 (4): 274-288. [Pp. 279-280: kin term exchanges.] MacNeish (Helm), June. HAVE 1960. Kin Terms of Arctic Drainage Dene: Hare, Slavey, Chipewyan. American Anthropologist 62 (2): 279-295. Corrections: American Anthropologist 62 (6): 1057. Yerbury, John C. HAVE 1975. An Ethnohistorical Reconstruction of the Social Organization of Athabascan Indians in the Alaskan Subarctic and in the Canadian Western Subarctic and Pacific Drainage. M. A. thesis. Simon Fraser University. Yerbury, John C. HAVE 1980. The Social Organization of the Subarctic Athapascan Indians: An Ethnohistorical Reconstruction. Ph.D. dissertation. Simon Fraser University. AHTNA De Laguna, Frederica, and Catherine McClellan. 1981. Ahtna. In Handbook of North American Indians. Vol. 6: Subarctic, edited by June Helm. Pp. 641-663. Washington Smithsonian University Press. [P. 652-656: kinship and clans, including kin terminology.] Kari, James. 1990. Ahtna Athabascan Dictionary. Fairbanks: University of Alaska, Alaska Native Language Center. [P. 699: kin terminology.] HAVE BABINE Gunlogson, Christine. 2001. Third-Person Object Prefixes in Babine-Witsuwit’en. International Journal of American Linguistics 67 (4): 365-395. [P. 383: kinship possession as opposed to bodypart possession.] BEAVER Ridington, Robin. 1968. The Environmental Context of Beaver Indian Behavior. Ph.D. dissertation. Harvard University: Department of Anthropology. [Pp. 43-80: Fort St. John kinship system and terminology.] Ridington, Robin. HAVE 1969. Kin Categories Versus Kin Groups: A Two-Section System Without Sections. Ethnology 8 (4): 460-467. [Beaver.] Ridington, Robin. 1981. Beaver. In Handbook of North American Indians. Vol. 6. Subarctic, edited by June Helm. Pp. 350-360. Washington: Smithsonian Institution. [Pp. 352-353: “Kinship.”] Shapiro, Warren. HAVE 1970. The Ethnography of Two-Section Systems. Ethnology 9 (4): 380-388. [The Beaver system in the light of Australian sections.]

CARRIER Duff, Wilson. HAVE 1951. Notes on Carrier Social Organization. Anthropology in British Columbia 2: 28-34. Victoria, B.C.: British Columbia Provincial Museum, Department of Education. [Pp. 3334: kin terminologies as evidence of transition to a phratry organization.] Goldman, Irving. HAVE 1941. The Alkatcho Carrier: Historical Background of Crest Prerogatives. American Anthropologist 43 (3): 397-418. [P. 405: kin terminology.] Hudson, Douglas R. 1972. The Historical Determinants of Carrier Social Organization: A Study of Northwest Athabascan Matriliny. M.A. thesis. McMaster University, Hamilton, ONT. 185 P. [Especially pp. 129-148: “Kinship,” including terminology.”] HAVE Jenness, Diamond. 1943. The Carrier Indians of the Bulkley River, Their Social and Religious Life. Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 133. Anthropological Papers 25. [Pp. 26-27: kin terminology.] HAVE Morice, Adrien G. 1893. Are the Carrier Sociology and Mythology Indigenous or Exotic? Proceedings and Transactions of the Royal Society of Canada for the Year 1892 10, Section II: 109-126. [Includes some data on clans and marriages.] Tobey, Margaret L. 1981. Carrier. In Handbook of North American Indians. Vol. 6. Subarctic, edited by June Helm. Pp. 413-432. Washington: Smithsonian Institution. [Pp. 423-424: “Kinship.”] Walker, Shirley. HAVE 1974. Kinship. In Central Carrier Bilingual Dictionary by Francesca Antoine, Catherine Bird, Agnes Isaac, Nellie Prince, Sally Sam, Richard Walker and David B. Wilkinson. Pp. 379-393. Fort Saint James, B.C.: Carrier Linguistic Committee. 397 P. CHILCOTIN Lane, Robert B. HAVE 1981. Chilcotin. In Handbook of North American Indians. Vol. 6. Subarctic, edited by June Helm. Pp. 402-412. Washington: Smithsonian Institution. [P. 407: “Kinship.”] CHIPEWYAN Birket-Smith, Kaj. 1930. Contributions to Chipewyan Ethnology. Report of the Fifth Thule Expedition 192124. Vol. 6, no. 3. Copenhagen: Gyldendalske Boghandel. [P. 68: brief description of kin terminological principles. No kin terms given.] HAVE Goddard, Pliny E. HAVE 1912. Analysis of Cold Lake Dialect, Chipewyan. Anthropological Papers of the American Museum of Natural History 10, pt. 2: 67-170. [Pp. 105-107: kin terminology.] Jarvenpa, Robert.

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2004. Silot’ine: An Insurance Perspective on Northern Dene Kinship Networks in Recent History. Journal of Anthropological Research 60 (2): 153-178. Li, Fang-Kuei. 1946. Chipewyan. In Linguistic Structures of Native America, edited by Cornelius Osgood. Pp. 398-423. New York: Viking Fund. (Viking Fund Publications in Anthropology 6.) [P. 401: inalienable possession, including kin terms.] Sharp, Henry S. 1973. The Kinship System of the Black Lake Chipewyan. Ph.D. dissertation. Duke University. Sharp, Henry S. HAVE 1975. Introducing the Sororate to a Northern Saskatchewan Chipewyan Village. Ethnology 14 (1): 71-82. Sharp, Henry S. 1979. Chipewyan Marriage. Canadian Ethnology Service Papers 58. Ottawa: National Museums of Canada. [Pp. 10-21: kin terminology.] HAVE Smith, James G. E. HAVE 1994. Historical Changes in the Chipewyan Kinship System. In North American Indian Anthropology: Essays on Society and Culture, edited by Raymond J. DeMallie and Alfonso Ortiz. Pp. 49-81. Norman and London: University of Oklahoma Press. VanStone, James W. 1963. The Snowdrift Chipewyan. Ottawa: Department of Northern Affairs and National Resources. [Pp. 58-63: kin terminology.] HAVE DOGRIB Dogrib Dictionary. Rae-Edzo, N.W.T.: Dogrib Divisional Board of Education. Helm, June. 1961. The Lynx Point People: The Dynamics of a Northern Athapascan Band. Bulletin of the National Museum of Canada 176. Anthropological Series 53. Ottawa. [Pp. 55-72: kin terminology.] HAVE Review: McClellan 1963. Helm, June. 1968. The Nature of Dogrib Socioterritorial Units. In Man the Hunter, edited by Richard B. Lee and Irven DeVore. Pp. 118-125. Chicago: Aldine. [Kinship groups, task groups, and regional groups as the pillars of Dogrib society; also Discussion in the same volume, pp. 150-155.] Helm, June. 1981. Dogrib. In Handbook of North American Indians. Vol. 6. Subarctic, edited by June Helm. Pp. 291-309. Washington: Smithsonian Institution. [Pp. 301-302: kinship and a terminological chart.] HAN Osgood, Cornelius B.

1971. The Han Indians: A Compilation of Ethnographic and Historical Data on the Alaska-Yukon Boundary Area. Yale University Publications in Anthropology 74. New Haven. [Pp. 39-46: social organization and kin terminology.] HAVE HARE Hara, Hiroko S. 1964. Hare Indians and Their World. Ph.D. dissertation. Bryn Mawr College. Hara, Hiroko S. HAVE 1980. The Hare Indians and Their World. Canadian Ethnology Service Papers 83. Ottawa: National Museums of Canada. [Pp. 244-260: kin terminology and behavior.] Lanoue, Guy. HAVE 1981. Flexibility in Hare Social Organization. Canadian Journal of Native Studies 1 (2): 1-27. [Kinship and production.] Savishinsky, Joel S. 1970. Kinship and the Expression of Values in an Athapascan Bush Community. Western Canadian Journal of Anthropology 2 (1): 31-59. [Kawchotinne (Hare).] Savishinsky, Joel S. 1974. The Trail of the Hare: Life and Stress in an Arctic Community. New York, etc.: Gordon and Breach Science Publishers. [Pp. 43-84: “Kinship and History.”] Reviews: Riches 1976; Foulks 1977. Savishinsky, Joel S., and Hiroko Sue Hara. 1981. Hare. In Handbook of North American Indians. Vol. 6. Subarctic, edited by June Helm. Pp. 291-309. Washington: Smithsonian Institution. [P. 319: kinship and social organization.] INGALIK Snow, Jeanne H. 1981. Ingalik. In Handbook of North American Indians. Vol. 6. Subarctic, edited by June Helm. Pp. 602-617. Washington: Smithsonian Institution. [Pp. 610-611: “Kinship.”] KASKA Honigmann, John J. 1949. Culture and Ethos of Kaska Society. Yale University Publications in Anthropology 40. New Haven: Yale University Press. [Pp. 127-131: kin terminology.] HAVE Reviews: Lee D. 1950; Brown P. 1951. Honigmann, John J. 1954. The Kaska Indians: An Ethnographic Reconstruction. New Haven: Yale University Press. (Publications in Anthropology 51.) [Pp. 75-84: kin terminologies. Includes Tahltan and Sekani.] HAVE Review: Osgood 1955. Honigmann, John J.

1981. Kaska. In Handbook of North American Indians. Vol. 6. Subarctic, edited by June Helm. Pp. 442-453. Washington: Smithsonian Institution. [Pp. 446-447: kinship and social organization.] McDonnell, Roger F. 1975. Kasini Society: Some Aspects of the Social Organization of an Athapascan Culture Between 1900-1950. Ph.D. dissertation. University of British Columbia: Department of Anthropology and Sociology. [Pp. 200-201, 227-249: Kaska kinship system and terminology.] KOYUKON Krauss, Michael E. HAVE 2000. Koyukon Kinship. In Koyukon Athabascan Dictionary, by Jules Jetté and Eliza Jones. Pp. 815-822. Fairbanks: University of Alaska, Alaska Native Language Center. McFadyen Clark, A. 1981. Koyukon. In Handbook of North American Indians. Vol. 6. Subarctic, edited by June Helm. Pp. 582-601. Washington: Smithsonian Institution. [P. 591: marriage.] KUTCHIN (GWICH’IN, TUKUDH, LOUCHEUX) Baliksi, Asen. 1963a. Family Organization of the Vunta Kutchin. Arctic Anthropology 1 (2): 62-69. Baliksi, Asen. 1963b. Vunta Kutchin Social Change: A Study of the People Old Crow, Northern Yukon Territory. Ottawa: Northern Research and Coorditation Centre, Government of Canada. Review: Osgood 1963. Hardisty, William L. 1872. The Loucheux Indians. In Annual Report of the Smithsonian Institution for 1866. Pp. 311-320. Washington, DC: Government Printing Office. [Includes information on matrilocal residence and matrilineal clans.] Jones, Strachan. 1872. The Kutchin Tribes. In Annual Report of the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian Institution for the Year 1866. Pp. 320-327. Washington: Government Printing Office. [P. 326: teknonymy.] HAVE Krech, Shepard III. HAVE 1979. The Nakotcho Kutchin: A Tenth Aboriginal Kutchin Band? Journal of Anthropological Research 35 (1): 109-121. [Population reduction and its effect on the loss of matrilineal institutions and a shift to matri- and bilocality.] McKennan, Robert A. 1965. The Chandalar Kutchin. Montreal: Arctic Institute of North America. (Technical Paper 17.) Montreal. [Pp. 62-63: kin terminology.] HAVE Reviews: Helm 1966; Osgood 1966; Slobodin 1966; McClellan 1967; Bishop 1970. Osgood, Cornelius B.

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1936. Contributions to the Ethnography of the Kutchin. New Haven: Yale University Press. (Publications in Anthropology 14.) [Pp. 115-120: kin terminologies.] Reviews: Birket-Smith 1938; Goldman 1938. Sapir, Edward. 1936. Kutchin Relationship Terms. In Contributions to the Ethnography of the Kutchin, by Cornelius Osgood. Pp. 136-137. New Haven: Yale University Press. Reprinted in: The Collected Works of Edward Sapir, edited by Victor Golla, Philip Sapir, Regna Darnell and Judith Irvine. Pp. 759-762. Berlin and New York: Mouton de Gruyter, 1990. Slobodin, Richard. 1962. Band Organization of the Peel River Kutchin. Ottawa: National Museum of Canada. (Bull. 179.) Review: Osgood 1963. Slobodin, Richard. 1981. Kutchin. In Handbook of North American Indians. Vol. 6. Subarctic, edited by June Helm. Pp. 514-532. Washington: Smithsonian Institution. [Pp. 517-524: kinship and clans.] SARSI Honigmann, John J. 1956. Notes on Sarsi Kin Behavior. Anthropologica 32: 17-38. Jenness, Diamond. 1938. The Sarcee Indians of Alberta. National Museum of Canada Bulletin 90. Anthropological Series 23. Ottawa. [P. 24: kin terms.]

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SATUDENE Osgood, Cornelius B. HAVE 1933. The Ethnography of the Great Bear Lake Indians. Annual Report of the National Museum of Canada. Ottawa: F. A. Acland. [P. 76: incomplete list of Satudene kin terms.] SEKANI Jenness, Diamond. 1937. The Sekani Indians of British Columbia. Ottawa: J. O. Patenaude. (Canada Department of Mines and Resources, Bulletin 84, Anthropological Series 20.) [Pp. 51-52: kin terminology.] HAVE Lanoue, Guy. 1992. Brothers: The Politics of Violence among the Sekani of Northern British Columbia. Oxford and New York: Berg. Review: Riches 1995. SLAVEY

Asch, Michael I. 1972. A Social Behavioral Approach to Music Analysis: The Case of the Slavey Drum Dance. Ph.D. dissertation. Columbia University: Faculty of Political Science. [Pp. 47-60: kin terminology.] Asch, Michael I. 1981. Slavey. In Handbook of North American Indians. Vol. 6. Subarctic, edited by June Helm. Pp. 338-349. Washington: Smithsonian Institution. [Pp. 341-342: kinship and social organization; 343-344: marriage.] Asch, Michael. 1988. Kinship and the Drum Dance in a Northern Dene Community. Edmonton: Boreal Institute for Northern Studies. [Pp. 35-57: kinship structure and “Dravidian” kin terminology.] HAVE Reviews: Helm 1989; Ives 1989; Hauck 1990; Johnston 1990; Riddington 1990. Asch, Michael. 1998. Kinship and Dravidianate Logic: Some Implications for Understanding Power, Politics, and Social Life in a Northern Dene Community. In Transformations of Kinship, edited by Maurice Godelier, Thomas R. Trautmann, and Franklin E. Tjon Sie Fat. Pp. 140-149. Washington and London: Smithsonian Institution Press. [Slavey.] Asch, Michael, and Shirleen Smith. 1999. Slavey Dene. In The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Hunters and Gatherers, edited by Richard B. Lee and Richard Daly. Pp. 46-50. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. [P. 48: kinship.] Honigmann, John J. HAVE 1946. Ethnography and Acculturation of the Fort Nelson Slave. New Haven: Yale University Press. (Publications in Anthropology 33.) [Pp. 67-72: kin terminology.] Review: Carter 1948b. Rice, Keren. 1989. A Grammar of Slave. Berlin and New York: Mouton de Gruyter. [P. 992, n. 28: self-reciprocal terminology between grandparents and grandchildren and frozen reciprocal pronouns.] Review: Kari 1989. Rushforth, Scott E. 1977. Kinship and Social Organization among the Great Bear Lake Indians: A Cultural Decision-Making Model. Ph.D. dissertation. University of Arizona. 463 P. Rushforth, Scott E. 1981. Speaking to ‘Relatives-Through-Marriage’: Aspects of Communication among the Bear Lake Athapascans. Journal of Anthropological Research 37 (1): 28-45. Rushforth, Scott E. HAVE 1982. A Structural Semantic Analysis of Bear Lake Athapascan Kinship Classification. American Ethnologist 9 (3): 559-577. Rushforth, Scott E.

1984. Bear Lake Athapaskan Kinship and Task Group Formation. Canadian Ethnological Service Papers 99. Ottawa: National Museum of Man. [Pp. 50-87: kin terminology, semantic analysis.] HAVE TAHLTAN Adlam, Robert G. 1986. The Structural Basis of Tahltan Indian Society. Ottawa: National Library of Canada. [Kinship, descent, inheritance.] MacLachlan, Bruce B. 1981. Tahltan. In Handbook of North American Indians. Vol. 6. Subarctic, edited by June Helm. Pp. 458-468. Washington: Smithsonian Institution. [P. 464: marriage and kinship.] TANACROSS Holton, Gary. 2000. The Phonology and Morphology of the Tanacross Athabascan Language. Ph.D. dissertation. University of California, Santa Barbara. [Pp. 129-130, 153-157: inalienable possession, including kin terms; 154: partial list of kin terms.] HAVE TANAINA Ellanna, Linda J., and Andrew Balluta. 1992. Nuvendaltin Quht’ana: The People of Nondalton. Washington and London: Smithsonian Institution Press. [Pp. 99-123: “Family, Clan, and Band: Themes of Inland Dena’ina Social Organization.” Includes kin terminology.] HAVE Review: Müller-Wille 1993; Simeone 1993. Garr, Ben, and Celina Janvier. 1996. Iláh Dëne Húdzi = Kinship Terms: Dëne “T” Dialect. La Ronge, Saskatchewan: Northern Lights School Division No. 113. 8 P. Hay, Elaine. 1998. Dene Hélotíne – Kinship. Saskatoon: Saskatchewan Indian Cultural Centre. [Tinne-English kin term dictionary.] Kari, James. 1977. Dena’ina Noun Dictionary. Fairbanks: University of Alaska, Alaska Native Language Center. [Pp. 82-86: kin terms.] HAVE Osgood, Cornelius B. 1937. The Ethnography of the Tanaina. New Haven: Yale University Press. (Yale University Publications in Anthropology 16.) [Pp. 144-147: kin terminology.] HAVE Townsend, Joan B. 1981. Tanaina. In Handbook of North American Indians. Vol. 6. Subarctic, edited by June Helm. Pp. 623-640. Washington: Smithsonian Institution. [Pp. 630-632: kinship and clans.] TANANA McKennan, Robert A.

1959. The Upper Tanana Indians. Yale University Publications in Anthropology 55. New Haven. [Pp. 121-123: kin terminology.] HAVE McKennan, Robert. 1981. Tanana. In Handbook of North American Indians. Vol. 6. Subarctic, edited by June Helm. Pp. 562-576. Washington: Smithsonian Institution. [Pp. 572-574: kinship and social organization.] TUTCHONE Arcand, Bernard. 1966. Ethnographie des Tutchone: Organisation Socio-Économique et Processus Acculturatifs. M.A. thesis. Université de Montréal. [Family, clan, generation.] Legros, Dominique. 1978. Dualisme de moitié et stratification sociale chez les Athapaskan Tutchone Septentrionaux du Territoire du Yukon. In Actes du 42e Congrès International des Americanistes. Paris, 2-9 September 1976. Vol. 5. Pp. 335-359. Paris: Musée de l’Homme. McClellan, Catharine. 1981. Tutchone. In Handbook of North American Indians. Vol. 6. Subarctic, edited by June Helm. Pp. 493-505. Washington: Smithsonian Institution. [Pp. 499-500: kinship and social organization.] SOUTHERN GENERAL Opler, Morris E. HAVE 1936. The Kinship Systems of the Southern Athabascan-Speaking Tribes. American Anthropologist 38 (4): 620-633. APACHE Bartelt, G. HAVE 1993. Transfer of Kinship Semantics in Apachean English. Anthropos 88 (4-6): 500-504. Basso, Keith 1983. Western Apache. In Handbook of North American Indians. Vol. 10. Southwest, edited by Alfonso Ortiz. Pp. 462-488. Washington: Smithsonian Institution. [Pp. 470475: kinship, marriage, and social organization.] Bellah, Robert N. 1952. Apache Kinship Systems. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

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Review: Oblasser 1955. Boyer, Ruth. 1964. The Matrifocal family among the Mescalero: Additional Data. American Anthropologist 66: 593-603. Cantrell, Wanda R. 1983. The Negotiation of Marriage and Affinity: Jicarilla Apache Women and the Family (New Mexico). Ph.D. dissertation. University of Mexico. 183 P.

Donald, Leland, and Marion Tighe. HAVE 1987. A Formal Analysis of Three Apachean Kinship Terminologies. In Themes in Ethnology and Culture History: Essays in Honor of David F. Aberle, edited by Leland Donald. Pp. 34-80. Sadar, India: Archana. Driver, Harold E. HAVE 1972. Reply to Opler on Apachean Subsistence, Residence, and Girls' Puberty Rites American Anthropologist 74 (5): 1147-1151. Goodwin, Grenville. 1933. Clans of the Western Apache. New Mexico Historical Review 8 (3): 176-182. Goodwin, Grenville. 1942. The Social Organization of the Western Apache. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. 701 P. Hedican, Edward J. HAVE 1986. The Evolution of Apache-Athapaskan Sibling Terminology: A Reconsideration. Western Canadian Anthropologist 3: 1-18. Hoijer, Harry. 1946. Chiricahua Apache. In Linguistic Structures of Native America, edited by Cornelius Osgood. Pp. 55-84. New York: Viking Fund. (Viking Fund Publications in Anthropology 6.) [P. 75: inalienable possession, including kin terms.] Kaut, Charles R. 1956. Western Apache Clan and Phratry Organization. American Anthropologist 58 (1): 140-146. Kaut, Charles R. 1957. The Western Apache Clan System: Its Origins and Development. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press. 99 P. Review: Bellah 1958. Kaut, Charles R. 1974. The Clan System as an Epiphenomenal Element of Western Apache Social Organization. Ethnology 13 (1): 45-70. Kraus, Bertram S., and Charles B. White. HAVE 1956. Micro-Evolution in a Human Population: A Study of Social Endogamy and Blood Type Distributions among the Western Apache. American Anthropologist 58 (6): 10171043. Opler, Morris E. 1933. An Analysis of Mescalero and Chiricahua Apache Social Organization in the Light of Their Systems of Relationship. Ph.D. dissertation. University of Chicago. 117 P. Opler, Morris E. 1936. An Analysis of Mescalero and Chiricahua Apache Social Organization in the Light of Their Systems of Relationship. Part of Ph.D. Thesis, University of Chicago, 1933. Chicago, IL: Privately printed; Distributed by the University of Chicago Libraries. 19 P.

Opler, Morris E. 1936. A Summary of Jicarilla Apache Culture. American Anthropologist 38 (2): 202-223. [Pp. 216-222: kinship and marriage, including kin terminology.] Opler, Morris E. 1937a. Apache Data Concerning the Relation of Kinship Terminology to Social Classification. American Anthropologist 37 (2): 201-212.

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Opler, Morris E. HAVE 1937b. An Outline of Chiricahua Apache Social Organization. In Social Anthropology of North American Tribes, edited by Fred Eggan. Pp. 173-242. Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press. Opler, Morris E. HAVE 1972. Cause and Effect in Apachean Agriculture, Division of Labor, Residence Patterns, and Girls' Puberty Rites. American Anthropologist 74 (5): 1133-1146. Opler, Morris E. 1983a. Chiricahua Apache. In Handbook of North American Indians. Vol. 10. Southwest, edited by Alfonso Ortiz. Pp. 401-418. Washington: Smithsonian Institution. [P. 412: kinship and social organization.] Opler, Morris E. 1983b. Mescalero Apache. In Handbook of North American Indians. Vol. 10. Southwest, edited by Alfonso Ortiz. Pp. 419-439. Washington: Smithsonian Institution. [Pp. 429431: kinship and social organization.] Reuse, Willem de. HAVE 2008. Denominal Verbs In Apachean Languages. International Journal of American Linguistics 7 (4): 423-438. [Kin verbs in Chiricahua Apache.] Samuels, David. 1993. Kinship as Verbal Art: A Western Apache Case. In SALSA I: Proceedings of the First Annual Symposium about Language and Society-Austin, edited by Robin Queen and Rusty Barrett. Pp. 21-26. Austin TX: University of Texas, Department of Linguistics. Tiller, Veronica E. 1983. Jicarilla Apache. In Handbook of North American Indians. Vol. 10. Southwest, edited by Alfonso Ortiz. Pp. 440-461. Washington: Smithsonian Institution. [Pp. 443444: kinship and social organization.] White, Charles B. HAVE 1957. The Western Apache and Cross-Cousin Marriage. American Anthropologist 59 (1): 131-133. KIOWA-APACHE Brant, Charles S. HAVE 1953. Kiowa Apache Culture History: Some Further Observations. Southwestern Journal of Anthropology 9 (2): 195-202. [Pp. 195-196: Kiowa Apache kinship in comparison with Kiowa.]

McAllister, J. Gilbert. 1935. Kiowa-Apache Social Organization. Ph.D. dissertation. University of Chicago McAllister, J. Gilbert. 1937a. Kiowa-Apache Social Organization. Part of Ph.D. Thesis, University of Chicago, 1935. Pp. 99-169, 445-449. Chicago, IL: Privately printed; Distributed by the University of Chicago Libraries. McAllister, J. Gilbert. HAVE 1937b. Kiowa-Apache Social Organization. In Social Anthropology of North American Tribes, edited by Fred Eggan. Pp. 99-172. Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press. NAVAHO Aberle, David F. 1981a. Century of Navajo Kinship Change. Canadian Journal of Anthropology 2 (1): 2136. Aberle, David F. 1981b. Navajo Coresidential Kin Groups and Lineages. Journal of Anthropological Research 37 (1): 1-7. Adarns, William Y. 1958 New Data on Navajo Social Оrganization. Plateau 30: 64-70. Adarns, William Y. 1963 Shonto: А Study of the Role of the Тrader in a Мodern Navaho Community. Washington: Government Prinitng Office. (Bureau of American Ethnology, Bull. 188.) [Data on uxorilocal vs. virilocal residence.] Adams, William Y. HAVE 1971. Navajo Social Organization. American Anthropologist 73 (1): 273. [Critique of Witherspoon 1970.] Adams, William Y. HAVE 1983. Once More to the Fray: Further Reflections on Navajo Kinship and Residence. Journal of Anthropological Research 39 (4): 393-414. Begay, Shirley M, Verna Clinton-Tullie, T. L. McCarty, and Fred Bia. 1983a. Ke Binaniltin: First Grade Teacher's Manual for Navajo Kinship and Clanship. Rough Rock, AZ: Navajo Curriculum Center, Rough Rock Demonstration School, 1983. 53 P. Begay, Shirley M, Verna Clinton-Tullie, T. L. McCarty, and Fred Bia. 1983b. Ke Binaniltin: Kindergarten Teacher's Manual for Navajo Kinship and Clanship. Rough Rock, AZ: Navajo Curriculum Center, Rough Rock Demonstration School. 21 P. Carr, Malcolm, Katherine Spencer, and Doriane Woolley. 1939. Navaho Clans and Marriage at Pueblo Alto. American Anthropologist 41 (2): 245-257. Fenton, Joann C.

1974. A Cultural Analysis of Navajo Family and Clan. Ph. D. dissertation. Northwestern University. 260 P. Fiske, Shirley J. 1975. Navajo Cognition in the Urban Milieu: An Investigation of Social Categories and Use of Address Terms. Ph.D. dissertation. Stanford CA: Stanford University. [Pp. 192235: Navajo system of address, including the use of kin terms (pp. 202-204: table of kin terms).] Fiske, Shirley J. 1978. Rules of Address: Navajo Women in Los Angeles. Journal of Anthropological Research 34 (1): 72-91. Franciscan Fathers. 1910. An Ethnologic Dictionary of the Navaho Language. Saint Michaels, AZ: Navaho Indian Mission. Francisconi, Michael J. 1998. Kinship, Capitalism, Change: The Informal Economy of the Navajo, 1868-1995. New York: Garland. Freed, Stanley A., and Ruth S. Freed. 1970. A Note on Regional Variation in Navajo Kinship Terminology. American Anthropologist 72 (6): 1439-1444.

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Goosen, Irvy W. 1995. Diné Bizaad: Speak, Read, Write Navajo. Flagstaff, AZ: Salina Bookshelf. [P. 11: kin terms and possession.] HAVE Haile, Berard. 1926. A Manual of Navaho Grammar. St.Michael’s, AZ. [Pp. 29-32: kin terms and possessive markers.] HAVE Helmig, Thomas. HAVE 1980. A Note on Alternate Designations of Kin Types in Navajo Society. Journal of Anthropological Research 36 (4): 470-473. Helmig, Thomas. HAVE 1992. Navajo Kin Classification and Crow-Type Structures. Zeitschrift für Ethnologie 117: 59-70. Henderson, Eric. HAVE 1983. Social Organization and Seasonal Migrations among the Navajo. The Kiva 48 (4): 279-306. Henderson, Eric, Stephen J. Kunitz, and Jerrold E. Levy. 1999. The Origins of Navajo Youth Gangs. American Indian Culture and Research Journal 23 (3): 243-264. [On English term brother-cousin in Navaho gang parlance.] Kiser, O. L. 1937. Navajo Indian Family. M.A. thesis. University of Kentucky, Department of Sociology. Lamphere, Louise A.

1968. Social Organization and Cooperation in a Navaho Community. Ph.D. dissertation. Harvard University. Landar, Herbert. HAVE 1962. Fluctuations of Forms in Navaho Kinship Terminology. American Anthropologist 64 (5, pt. 1): 985-1000. Lewton, Elizabeth, and Thomas J. Csordas. HAVE 1999. I Have No Relatives: Navajo Narratives of Distress and Therapeutic Transformation. In Dine baa Hane bi Naaltsoos: Selected Papers from the Seventh through Tenth Navajo Studies Conferences, edited by June-el Piper. Pp. 131-138. Window Rock, AZ: Navajo Nation Preservation Department. Leighton, Dorothea, and Clyde Kluckhohn. 1948. Children of the People: The Navaho Individual and His Development. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. [Extensively on Navajo kinship, e.g. pp. 6, 44ff on the use of kin terms.] Matthews, Washington. 1891. Marriage Prohibitions on the Father’s Side among the Navajos. Journal of American Folklore 4: 78-79. Morgan, Kenneth. HAVE 1979. Clan Groups and Clan Exogamy among the Navajo. Journal of Anthropological Research 35 (2): 157-169. Reichard, Gladys A. 1928. Social Life of the Navajo Indians, with some attention to minor ceremonies. New York: Columbia University Press. [Pp. 74-88: kin terminology and behavior.] HAVE Review: Haile 1929. Ross, William T. 1956. Navaho Kinship and Social Organization, with special reference to a transitional community. Ph.D. dissertation. University of Chicago. Shepardson, Mary. 1966. Navaho Inheritance Patterns: Random or Regular. Ethnology 5: 87-96. Shepardson, Mary, and Blowden Hammond. HAVE 1970. The Navajo Mountain Community: Social Organization and Kinship Terminology. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press. Reviews: Ellis 1971; Hodge 1971; Lamphere 1971; Landar 1972. Simmons, Donald C. 1950. The Alamo Navaho Kinship and Sib Systems. M.A. thesis. Yale University. Tan-Wong, Nellie S. L. 1992. Navaho. In Adat Perpatih: A Matrilineal System in Negeri Sembilan, Malaysia and Other Matrilineal Kinship Systems Throughout the World, edited by Nellie S. L. Tan-Wong, and Vipin Patel. Pp. 77-79. Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia: Wintrac.

Witherspoon, Gary. 1970. A New Look at Navajo Social Organization. American Anthropologist 72 (1): 5565. See also Adams 1971. Witherspoon, Gary. 1971. A Cultural and Social Analysis of Navajo Kinship and Social Organization. Ph.D. dissertation. University of Chicago. Witherspoon, Gary. 1975a. Navajo K’é Terminology. Diné Bizaad Nánil’iih 2: 1-27.

HAVE

Witherspoon, Gary. 1975b. Navajo Kinship and Marriage. Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press. Reviews: Aberle 1976; Levy 1976. Witherspoon, Gary. 1983. Navajo Social Organization. In Handbook of North American Indians. Vol. 10. Southwest, edited by Alfonso Ortiz. Pp. 524-535. Washington: Smithsonian Institution. [P. 524: “Types of solidarity.”] Young, Robert W., and William Morgan, 1943. The Navajo Language: The Elements of Navaho Grammar with a Dictionary in Two Parts Containing Basic Vocabularies of Navaho and English. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Indian Service, Education Division. [Pp. 11-12: kin terms as “constantly possessed nouns.”] HAVE Zelditch, Morris. 1959. Statistical Marriage Preferences of the Ramah Navaho. American Anthropologist 61 (3): 470-491.

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