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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
3 pages in length. The writer briefly compares the marital mores of Americans and Pygmies. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCmargamer.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
serves as a tool for cultural progression is both grand and far-reaching; that Pygmies procreate for survival needs is a particularly pertinent rationale for choosing an appropriate marriage partner.
The role blood lineage play is instrumental in the transmission of social status within matrilineal Pygmy societies; clearly, blood lineage represents a standard of compliance that cannot be fully documented
where outsiders are concerned. With this type of arrangement, it is not surprising to find that love has little to do with the choice of mate; for some, it
is a family objective to see to it that daughters are married within expected time frames in concert with the entire matrimonial process being both time honored and established.
As such, social and cultural obligation is a considerable component of Pygmy marriage, particularly when it is a matrimonial requirement for the groom to find a bride for the brides
brother. It is at this point in Turnbulls (1987) that one woman volunteered to marry in these circumstances as a means by which to exact revenge for being "jilted
and insulted" (p. 203). The institution of marriage in America has witnessed myriad modifications throughout the years, not the least of which includes
an almost mandatory tradition to an outright rebellion against what some believed was nothing more than a master/slave contract. Some contend that the public attitude toward the law of
marriage has shifted so many times, it is difficult to know precisely where the current barometer stands. Statistics show people are not as happy as they think they are,
resulting in fifty percent of all marriages ending in divorce. The family unit, once a safe haven for well-balanced, mentally healthy children, is now a defragmented, dysfunctional group of
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