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Age, Descent and Elders among the Pokomo
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 January 2012
Extract
A number of writers have noted that for East Africa, age organization and lineage organization are structural alternatives. More precisely, Southall (1970) has argued that the full and dominant development of age organization is incompatible with that of a segmentary lineage structure. Forde (1971) has similarly concluded that the two may be alternatives, and that selection between them may be partly dependent on ecological factors. However, I would like to contend that to write of the elaboration, or non-elaboration, of age structures and descent groups or of a conflict of allegiances, may well be a sterile exercise if it is unrelated to an analysis of the mode of livelihood of the people concerned. Furthermore, in light of the modern view of social structure as the outcome, at any point in time, of continuous processes of destructuring and restructuring, the ceaseless turnover of the membership of society, which age structures attempt to reduce to order, can be seen as one of the major sources of these processes, as Bottomore has recently argued (1975). Thus a source of structural stress, and hence ultimately of change, more important, I would argue, than the conflict between age and descent, is that between the generations.
Résumé
LES NOTIONS D'AGE ET DE FILIATION ET LEURS RAPPORTS AVEC LES ANCIENS CHEZ LES POKOMO
Le présent article étudie une société dans laquelle les concepts d'âge et de filiation servent à structurer des formes sociales. Mais, au lieu de se concentrer sur les fonctions positives d'allégéances opposées, l'auteur entreprend de montrer de quelle manière l'âge et la filiation se renforcent mutuellement afin que seuls les anciens aient accès aux moyens de production et de reproduction et les contrôlent. Les Pokomo exploitent les rives du fleuve Tana dans le Nord- Est du Kenya et les terres arables sont en nombre limité.
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- Copyright © International African Institute 1977
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