Chapter 1 The meaning of marriage and family
Why we live in families
1. Continuity as a result of emotional attachments, rights, and obligation. 2. Close proximity 3. Intimate awareness 4. Economic benefits
Family
A group of two or more persons related by birth, marriage, or adoption, and residing together in a household
Marriage
A legally recognized union between two people. Generally a man and a woman, in which they are united sexually, cooperate economically, and may give birth to, adopt, or rear children. In western cultures, the only legal form is monogomy As simple as such a definition may make it seem, it differs among cultures and has changed considerably in our society.
Family of procreation
Common term for the family formed through marriage and childbearing
Ideological positions (Not absolute)
Conservatives:Pessimistic Liberals: Optimistic Centrists: Blend of both
Shared features of a marriage
Despite cultural and historical variation the following characteristic seem to be shared: Gender, sexuality, relationships with kin and in-laws, legitimacy of children Establishment of specific roles within the wider community Transferr of wealth and property Assignment of responsibility for caring for and socializing children or thier relatives
Family of cohabitation
Family formed through living or cohabiting with another person, whether they are married or unmarried
Conjugal relationships
Family relationships created through marriage
Clan
Group of related families
Families are dynamic
If one family member does an action-it affects the entire family
Traditional gender roles
Male: Instrumental Rationality Aggression Goal-orientation Competitiveness Female: Expressive Nurturance Peacemaking Emotional expression
Traditional Family
Middle class version of the nuclear family
Nuclear Family
Mother, father, and children
Families are diverse
Not all families react the same way
Household
One or more people-everyone living in a housing unit
Notes
Our attitudes and beliefs affect and distort views... Experience vs expertise Ongoing social controversy
Outside influences
Outside forces shape family experiences
4 functions of family
Provision of intimacy Formation of a cooperative economic unit Reproduction and socialization Assignment of social roles and status
Centrist perspective
Share aspects of both liberal and conservative positions
Liberal perspective
The changes in family patterns are just that- changes, not signs of familial decline
The family of orientation
The family in which we grew up
Social institution
The patterned regular ways in which a society has organized to meet its basic need
Monogomy
The practice of having only one spouse at a time
Serial Monogomy
The practice of having only one spouse at a time over and over again.
Polyandry
The practice of having two or more husbands Very rare
Polygamy
The practice of having two or more spouses at a time. The preferred marital arrangement worldwide.
Polygyny
The practice of having two or more wives.
Kinship system
The social organization of the family
Myths
Universal Nuclear family Self reliant traditional family
Consanguineous relationships
created through biological ties. (through birth)
Conservative Perspective
cultural values have shifted from individual self sacrifice toward personal self-fulfillment
Socialization
the shaping of individual behavior to conform to social or cultural norms
Affiliated Kin
unrelated individuals who feel and are treated as if they were relatives