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Sex, Marriage and Family

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Title: Sex, Marriage and Family


1
Chapter 9
  • Sex, Marriage and Family

2
Sexual Relations
  • Among primates, the human female is unusual in
    her ability to engage in sexual activity whether
    she is fertile or not.
  • Every society has rules that govern sexual access.

3
Distinction Between Marriage and Mating
  • All animals, including humans, matesome for life
    and some not, some with a single individual and
    some with several.
  • Mates are secured and held solely through
    personal effort and mutual consent.
  • Marriage is a culturally recognized right and is
    backed by social, political, and ideological
    factors that regulate sexual relations and
    reproductive rights and obligations.

4
Marriage
  • A relationship between one or more men (male or
    female) and one or more women (female or male)
    who are recognized by society as having a
    continuing claim to the right of sexual access to
    one another.

5
Social Functions of Marriage
  • Create relationships between men and women that
    regulate mating and reproduction.
  • Provide a mechanism for regulating the sexual
    division of labor.
  • Creates a set of family relationships that
    provide for the material, educational, and
    emotional needs of children.

6
Sexual and Marriage Practices among the Nayar
  • The Nayar are one of many examples of sexually
    permissive cultures.
  • A landowning warrior caste, their estates are
    held by corporations made up of kinsmen related
    in the female line.
  • These relatives live together in a household,
    with the eldest male serving as manager.
  • Traditionally, Nayar boys began military training
    around age of 7, and were away from home for
    significant stretches of time.

7
The Nayar Three Traditional Transactions
  • Ritual Husband
  • Shortly before a girl experienced her first
    menstruation there was a ceremony that joined her
    with a ritual husband in a temporary union
    which did not necessarily involve sexual
    relations.

8
The Nayar Three Traditional Transactions
  • Visiting Husband
  • When a young Nayar woman entered into a
    continuing sexual liaison with a man approved by
    her family, it became a formal relationship that
    required the man to present her with gifts three
    times each year until the relationship was
    terminated.
  • The man could spend the nights with her, but had
    no obligation to support her economically.
  • The woman may have had such an arrangement with
    more than one man at the same time.

9
The Nayar Three Traditional Transactions
  • Acknowledging Paternity
  • When the woman became pregnant, one of the men
    with whom she has a relationship must acknowledge
    paternity by making gifts to the woman and the
    midwife.

10
Kin Relations
  • Consanguineal kin
  • Relatives by birth so-called blood relatives.
  • Affinal kin
  • Relatives by marriage.

11
Incest Taboo
  • The prohibition of sexual relations between
    specified individuals, usually parent-child and
    sibling relations at a minimum.

Natural Aversion Theory there is a natural
aversion to sexual intercourse among those who
have grown up together. Inbreeding Theory
mating between close kin produces a higher
incidence of genetic defects. Family disruption
Theory mating between family members would
create intense jealousies creating
disfunction. Theory of Expanding Social
Alliances marry outside the immediate family
creates a wider network of inter-family-alliances.
12
Endogamy and Exogamy
  • Endogamy
  • Marriage within a particular group or category of
    individuals.
  • Exogamy
  • Marriage outside the group.

13
Question
  • ____________ are relatives by birth, or so-called
    "blood kin."
  • Affinal kin
  • In laws
  • Conjugal kin
  • Kith and kin
  • Consanguineal kin

14
Question
  • Consanguineal kin are relatives by birth, or
    so-called "blood kin."

15
Question
  • Marriage within a particular group of individuals
    is called
  • incest.
  • exogamy.
  • monogamy.
  • endogamy.
  • polygamy.

16
Answer D
  • Marriage within a particular group of individuals
    is called endogamy.

17
Forms of Marriage
  • Monogamy
  • Polygyny
  • Polyandry
  • Bigamy
  • Group marriage
  • Fictive (Ghost) marriage

18
Monogamy
  • Monogamy is the most common form of marriage,
    primarily for economic reasons.
  • In most of the world, marriage is not based on
    romantic love, but on economic considerations.

Paul Newman Joanne Woodward Married over 50
years.
http//www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/artic
le/2008/09/01/AR2008090102087.html
19
Serial Monogamy
  • A form of marriage in which a man or woman
    marries a series of partners.
  • Increasingly common among middle-class North
    Americans as individuals divorce and remarry.

Larry King 6th wife Shawn Southwick
20
Polygamy Vs. Polygyny
  • Polygamy One individual having multiple spouses
    at the same time (Polymany gamousmarriage)
  • Polygyny Marriage of a man to two or more women
    at the same time a form of polygamy.

Warren Jeffs, leader of a polygamist seck known
as the Fundamentalist church of Jesus Christ of
Latter Day Saints. Arrested 2006, for rape
Sentenced , 2007 to 10yrs. Colorado City, AZ
Hilsdale, UT.
21
Polyandry
  • Marriage of a woman to two or more men at one
    time a form of polygamy.

In Tibet, where inheritance is in the male line
and arable land is limited, the marriage of
brothers to a single woman (fraternal polyandry)
keeps the land together by preventing it from
being repeatedly subdivided among sons from one
generation to the next.
Also provides male labor for the Tibetan mixed
economy of farming, herding, and trading.
22
Bigamy
  • Bigamy Two simultaneous monogamous marriages.

23
Group (Co-) Marriage
  • Marriage in which several men and women have
    sexual access to one another.

Ex Among members of an Eskimo hunting crew a
headman could lend his wife to a crew member who
could then borrow his wife in turn. The families
enter into a partnership relationship that can be
as strong as kinship where the children are
raised with retained recognition of the
relationship.
24
Fictive (Ghost) Marriage
  • Marriage by proxy to the symbols of someone not
    physically present to establish the social status
    of a spouse and heirs.
  • Ex In the Nuer culture (who are cattle herders)
    of southern Sudan a woman can marry a man who has
    died without any heirs.
  • The deceased mans brother may stand-in on his
    behalf if they have offspring the children will
    be considered the dead mans legitimate heirs.

25
Cousin Marriage
  • 19 states allow first cousin marriages in US.
  • 31 states do not allow it.
  • In some societies, the preferred spouse for a man
    is his fathers brothers daughter, known as
    patrilateral parallel-cousin marriage. (Arabs,
    ancient Israelites Greeks).
  • Parallel cousin marriage
  • Some societies favor matrilateral cross-cousin
    marriagemarriage of a man to his mothers
    brothers daughter, or a woman to her fathers
    sisters son.
  • Cross cousin marriage

26
Arguments Against Same Sex Marriage
  • Marriage has always been between males and
    females.
  • Same-sex marriages have been documented for a
    number of societies in Africa but in other parts
    of the world as well.
  • Same-sex unions legitimize gays and lesbians,
    whose sexual orientations have been widely
    regarded as unnatural.
  • Neither cross-cultural studies nor studies of
    other animal species suggest that homosexual
    behavior is unnatural.

27
Arguments Against Same Sex Marriage
  • The function of marriage is to produce children.
  • Marriage involves economic, political, and legal
    considerations.
  • It is increasingly common for same-sex partners
    to have children through adoption or reproductive
    technologies.

28
Marriage Exchanges
  • Bride-price
  • Payment of money from the grooms to the brides
    kin.
  • 46 of all societies, most widely found in Africa
    (82 of societies).
  • Bride service
  • The groom is expected to work for a period of
    time for the brides family.
  • Often moves in with them to help hunt, etc.
  • Found in approximately 14 of societies.
  • Dowry
  • Payment of a womans inheritance at the time of
    marriage to her or her husband.
  • Found in less than 3 of societies

29
Dowry
  • In some societies when a woman marries, she
    receives her share of the family inheritance
    which she brings to her new family. Shown here
    are Slovakian women carrying the objects of a
    womans dowry.

30
Question
  • Bride __________ refers to the period of time a
    groom is expected to work for his bride's family.
  • price
  • service
  • period
  • exchange
  • work

31
Answer B
  • Bride service refers to the period of time a
    groom is expected to work for his bride's family.

32
Divorce
  • Factors contributing to divorce
  • Many marriages are based on ideals of romantic
    love or the idealization of youth.
  • Establishing an intimate bond in a society in
    which people are taught to seek individual
    gratification is difficult.

33
Marriage Family
  • Family consists of people who consider
    themselves related by blood, marriage or
    adoption.
  • Nuclear Vs. Extended families
  • Married couples couples w/ kids single parents
    with child/ren polygamous spouses w/ kids/ - to
    several generations of parents w/ kids.
  • Patrilineal Vs. Matrilineal

34
Functions of the Family
The family fulfills basic needs or functions
within the society.
Functions
  • Socialization of children
  • Care of the sick and aged
  • Recreation
  • Sexual control
  • Reproduction
  • Economic productivity

35
Household
  • Basic residential unit in which economic
    production, consumption, inheritance, child
    rearing, and shelter are organized and carried
    out.
  • i.e., Family members that live in the same house.

36
Forms of the Family
  • Conjugal family
  • A family consisting of one (or more) man (who may
    be a female) married to one (or more) woman (who
    may be a male), and their offspring.
  • Consanguineal family
  • Related women, their brothers, and the womens
    offspring.

37
Forms of the Family
  • Nuclear family
  • A group consisting of one or more parents and
    dependent offspring, which may include a
    stepparent, stepsiblings, and adopted children.
  • Extended family
  • A collection of nuclear families, related by ties
    of blood, that live in one household.

38
Nuclear Families and the Inuit
  • Among Inuit people in Canada who still hunt for
    much of their food, nuclear families are typical.
    Their isolation from other relatives is usually
    temporary. Much of the time they are found in
    groups of at least a few related families.

39
Extended Family
  • In the Maya communities of Central America and
    Mexico, sons bring their wives to live in houses
    built on the edges of a small open plaza, on one
    edge of which their fathers house already
    stands. All members of the family work together
    for the common good and deal with outsiders as a
    single unit.

40
Household Types in the United States in 2000
41
Five Basic Residence Patterns
  • Patrilocal
  • Matrilocal
  • Ambilocal
  • Neolocal
  • Avunculocal

42
Residence Patterns
  • Patrilocal residence
  • A residence pattern in which a married couple
    lives in the locality associated with the
    husbands fathers relatives.
  • Matrilocal residence
  • A residence pattern in which a married couple
    lives in the locality associated with the wifes
    relatives.

43
Residence Patterns
  • Ambilocal residence
  • A pattern in which a married couple may choose
    either matrilocal or patrilocal residence.
  • Neolocal residence
  • A pattern in which a married couple may establish
    their household in a location apart from either
    the husbands or the wifes relatives.

44
Residence Patterns
  • Avunculocal residence
  • Residence of a married couple with the husbands
    mothers brother.

45
Families in a Globalized World
  • Many of Chinas 114 million migrant laborers work
    in factories and live in factory dormitories such
    as this.
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