Community and kinship in Talahara: Difference between revisions
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===Holidays and leisure=== | ===Holidays and leisure=== | ||
===Socialization=== | ===Socialization=== | ||
===Gender roles and sexuality=== | |||
==Kinship== | ==Kinship== | ||
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===Education=== | ===Education=== | ||
===Marriage and partnerships=== | ===Marriage and partnerships=== | ||
=== | ===Elderhood=== | ||
==See also== | ==See also== |
Revision as of 18:16, 1 August 2022
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Talahara's community and kinship structures are the fundamental social and economic building blocks of Talaharan culture and society. The most common familial structure is based on local kinship or community groupings; rather than patriarchal/matriarchal, extensive clan, or nuclear systems.
The template for Talaharan community and family structure comes from the traditional structures of the Kel Aman and Kel Hadar cultures. These two core cultures of the Talaharan nation each had distinct approaches to community structures which appear to have synthesized in the 18th century to form a common community structure along the coast and the foothills of the Adras Mountains. At the extremes, more traditional kinship associations have been maintained in Kel Aman communities on the coast and Kel Hadar communities in the mountains and desert. However, socio-political structures in the 19th and 20th centuries post-revolutionary era have predominantly promoted the synthesized Kel family structure.
As an element of the revolutionary program of the Talaharan Civil War, social and familial structures were rewritten and communities were reformed to promote social, political, and economic equity. This process is typically known as the Social Revolution, which spread through the country from the end of the Civil War to the turn of the century. The Social Revolution upturned traditional gender roles, clan/caste structures, and community governance structures. Further developments in the 20th and 21st centuries have altered perceptions and approaches to the integration and inclusion of marginalized groups.