Title: Families and Intimate Relationships
1Chapter 11
- Families and Intimate Relationships
2What do we mean by family?
- A social institution found in all societies that
unites people in cooperative groups to oversee
the bearing and socializing of children - Is this a micro view or a macro view of
families?
3What is kinship?
- A social network based on common ancestry,
marriage, or adoption - Kinships serve different functions
- Basic needs (e.g., food, shelter)
- Property-transfer arrangements
- Economic production
- Power allocation
4A macro contrastIndustrialized vs. Traditional
- In which kind of society do families serve fewer
and more specialized functions? - Industrialized (including post-industrialized)
- Why?
5Types of Families
- The family into which a person is born or adopted
and socialized is called a - family of orientation
- The family that a person forms by having or
adopting children is called a - family of procreation
- Persons who are not related by blood or adoption
by who are accepted as family members are called - families we choose (Judy Root Aulette)
- (Also called Family of choice)
6Types of Families
- A family unit composed of relatives in addition
to parents and children who live in the same
household is called an - Extended family
- A family unit composed of one or two parents and
their dependent children, apart from other
relatives is called a - Nuclear family
7What do we mean by marriage?
- A legally recognized and/or socially approved
arrangement between 2 or more individuals that
carries certain rights and obligations and
usually involves sexual activity. - A marriage between 2 partners is called
- monogamy
- What about serial monogamy?
- A marriage between 3 or more partners is called
- polygamy
- 2 kinds polygyny
- polyandry
8Theoretical Perspectives of Families
- Here, we are going to try to explain families
from macro and micro sociological perspectives,
paying attention to patterns and variation - I. How would functionalists explain the
existence of families?
9Functionalist Perspectives of Families
- In industrialized postindustrialized societies,
families serve 4 key functions for society - 1. Sexual regulation (boundaries)
reproduction of societal members - 2. Socialization (especially early in life)
- 3. Economic and psychological support
- 4. Provision of social statuses
10Conflict Perspectives of Families
- II. How would a conflict theorist understand and
explain families? - Some conflict theorists claim that families in
capitalist societies mirror the workplace, i.e.,
are sources of inequality and exploitation of
some over others. Womens work is unpaid and
therefore devalued and women are subordinated.
11Conflict Perspectives of Families
- Other conflict theorists claim that inequalities
experienced in the workplace place stress on
lower-class families and contribute to family
problems (e.g., high divorce rate, family
instability in lower social classes). - Feminist theorists focus on traditional
patriarchy (rather than capitalism) as a source
of womens powerlessness in families. Thus, they
question the traditional family structure. - What does this structure look like?
12Symbolic Interactionist Perspectives of Families
- III. How would symbolic interactionists
understand and explain families? - Focus on how we modify our roles (and selves) to
others expectations - Also, focus on how we experience family life and
how our self-concepts are shaped by it - Marriage involves the construction of a shared
reality. - If this shared reality does not develop OR one
or both members subjective experience changes,
what may happen?
13A Postmodernist Perspective of Families
- IV. How would postmodernists understand and
explain families? - Postmodernists recognize that families are
diverse and often disjointed. Because of
technology, family life and work life are
blurred. - What are possible consequences of technology on
family life?
14Cohabitation Domestic Partnerships
- Cohabitation 2 people living together as a
couple without being legally married. - Domestic partnership Cohabitation with the same
rights and benefits as accorded to married
heterosexual couples.
15Housework and Child-Care Responsibilities
- Dual-earner couple both partners are in labor
force - Families in which husbands consider themselves
the primary breadwinner are less likely to
contribute to housework - Families w/ more egalitarian values are more
likely to have an egalitarian distribution of
housework ?
16To Have or Not have Children
- Mean family size 2 children (in U. S.)
- Infertility affects nearly 5 million couples
(about 1 in 12) - Why? Causes related to male 40 Causes
related to female 30-40 - Unknown causes 20. One source of
infertility in both sexes ? STDs
17Adoption
- Adoption a legal process thru which the rights
and duties of parenting are transferred from a
childs biological and/or legal parents to a new
legal parent or parents. - Thousands of children are available for adoption.
- Why has adoption of U. S. babies decreased in
recent decades?
18Remaining Single
- Why has remaining single increased in recent
years? - See Figure 11.1 on page 365.
19Challenges in the 21st Century
- Family violence types?
- Children in Foster Care Why is the staying in
foster care increasing?? - Elder Abuse types?
20Challenges in the 21st CenturyDivorce
- Macro-sociological causes of divorce
- Greater opportunities for women to be
economically self-sufficient - Legally, divorces are easier to obtain (no
fault-based systems exist) - Less cultural stigma on divorce
- Risk Factors of persons to divorce
- Early age at marriage (lt18 yrs.)
- Short acquaintanceship lt marriage
- Disapproval of marriage by relatives friends
- Limited economic resources low wages
- No formal schooling beyond high school
- Having parents in unhappy marriages having
divorced parents - Presence of children at start of marriage
21Challenges in the 21st Century.Remarriage
- Do most divorced people remarry?
- YES! (see pp. 371-372)
- Sex differences?
- Age differences?
- Educational differences?