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[Note: this transcription was produced by an automatic OCR engine]
63
Purmgu
Panaka Y i -—.———... Panaka
‘finurrka///'
Karimrra
Tjarurru < I / Ijnrurru
Hi lungka
Figure 9: Mother-child relations in Kalgoorlie
The example of Kalgoorlie is interesting because not only does it produce a difierent
combination from that found in Laverton, despite identical bases, but also because it allows
a hypothesis about the establishment of an assimilatory identity of sections, in contrast to the
Laverton system where there is a relational identity. The following short illustration, however,
must be taken as hypothetical, 9' it assumes a collapse of generations, which means
that, at some stage, a man marries a person related to him as spouse but, at the same time, is
structurally in the section of his mother—in-law.
Ifirst examine mother-child relations where there are two cycles, as in every four-section
system. The question that arises is how it comes about that there is a mother-child relationship
between Purungu and Yiparrka, and between Katimana and Milangka, although, further east,
these sections are identical? Examining only these four sections, the relations are as follows:
If a child is Yiparrka, the mother is Panaka and the father Milaugka
If a child is Panaka, the mother is Yiparrka and the father Karimarra
If a child is Karimarra, the mother is Milangka and the father Panaka
If a child is Milangka, the mother is Karimarra and the father Yiparrka
These relations in the Kalgoorlie system are iepresented in Figure 10:
Mandjindja Waljen
V l
Tar-aru = Iba rga Tararu = Panaka
Milanga = Burungu Karimarra = Burungu
15 1‘
Figure 10: Kalgoorlie systems, comprising Mandjindja and Waljen arrows are
mother-child relations between the two systems
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