Genealogical Method
The genealogical method is W. H. R. Rivers' systematic procedure for collecting kinship genealogies in the field using a small, fixed set of questions and the community's own kin terms. By asking each informant a standard sequence — who are your parents, your siblings, your spouse, your children, and so on — and recording named individuals together with the relationship terms applied to them, the ethnographer accumulates concrete pedigrees. These pedigrees are then assembled to reconstruct descent, marriage, residence, and the broader principles of social organization.
اقرأ الطريقة كاملة
سجّل الدخول بحساب مجاني لقراءة هذا القسم.
خريطة المناهج
محيط المناهج ذات الصلة — اختر عقدةً للاستكشاف.
المصادر
- Rivers, W. H. R. (1910). The genealogical method of anthropological inquiry. The Sociological Review, 3(1), 1–12. DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-954X.1910.tb02078.x ↗
- Bernard, H. R. (2017). Research Methods in Anthropology: Qualitative and Quantitative Approaches (6th ed.). Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN: 9780759112421
كيف تستشهد بهذه الصفحة
ScholarGate. (2026, June 22). Rivers' Genealogical Method of Kinship Inquiry. ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/ar/anthropology/genealogical-method
أيُّ منهج؟
ضع هذا المنهج إلى جانب أقرب نظائره واقرأهما جنباً إلى جنب — المكتبة تضع الكتب على الطاولة، والاختيار لك.
- Ethnographic MappingAnthropology↔ قارن
- Key-Informant InterviewAnthropology↔ قارن
- Life-History InterviewAnthropology↔ قارن
- Residue Analysis (Kinship Terminology)Anthropology↔ قارن