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Chapter Seven Marriage and the Family. Today’s Statistics. From 1940 to 1990, the proportion of single-income families in the United States declined from nearly 70 percent to about 20 percent.
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Today’s Statistics • From 1940 to 1990, the proportion of single-income families in the United States declined from nearly 70 percent to about 20 percent. • At the end of the twentieth century, one-third of all children in America are born to unwed mothers, as often by choice as by necessity.
Naturalistic View of Marriage and the Family • Natural: Both quintessentially modern and traditional at the same time • It was natural for a man and woman to be bound permanently to each other through sexual love; natural to have children; natural to remain married; natural to have families consisting only of themselves and their children.
Naturalistic View (continued) • Statistics show (see page 209) that these models were not typical. For example: • In 1970, there were just over 500,000 unmarried heterosexual couples living together in the U.S. By 1980, the figure tripled; by 1990, the figure it doubled again. • In 1960, 75 percent of all households consisted of married couples (more than half contained children). By 2000, only 53 percent consistent of married couples (only a quarter of which contained children).
Naturalistic View (continued) • By a ratio of three to one, people surveyed in a 1990 Newsweek magazine poll defined the family as “a group of people who love and care for each other” rather than, as in earlier times, “a group of people related by blood, marriage, or adoption” (Stacey 1996:9).
Micro-Institutions • Micro-Institutions: Institutions that relate to our sense of personal security and shape the satisfaction we find in our personal interactions. These institutions tend to be personal and private and structure socialization and the affectual life.
Functionalism • Functionalism: An analytical perspective that views society as a system composed of various interdependent parts, such as actors, institutions, and the state. These parts have particular functions to serve within society and are assumed to work together with a tendency toward stability.
Gendered Division of Labor • Gendered Division of Labor: The differing ways that work and responsibility are divided up in the family between husband and wife. (outside of the home vs. domestic work)
The Marriage Squeeze • The Marriage Squeeze (or the Marriage Crunch/Marriage Gap) refers to the restricted supply of available partners that results when a woman chooses to delay marriage. Because cultural norms suggest that women should not marry younger men and men have a tendency to marry younger women, women who marry later may be caught in a “squeeze,” limiting their choices as they grow older.
Transformation of Marriage • Refers to postmodern efforts to denaturalize marriage and redefine the nature of the marriage contract. The movement in favor of gay marriage in the U.S. is perhaps the clearest example of this transformation.
Denaturalization • Denaturalization: The process by which something assumed to be normal, universal, and accepted is challenged or modified and thus no longer seems obvious or natural. • Example: The definition of a “relationship” between two people has changed.
Nuclear vs. Extended Families • Nuclear: Family organization usually consisting of a husband, wife, and children who are their offspring. • Extended: Family organization combining several generations and a variety of different kinship relations under one roof.
Consanguineal vs. Conjugal Nuclear Families • Consanguineal: Family organization that includes the conjugal nuclear family as well as a larger kinship network. • Nuclear: Family organization that emphasizes the marital bond and the nuclear family.
Family Units vs. Family Systems • Terms introduced by William J. Goode (1963, 1976, 1993) that highlight the differences between traditional and modern families. • After examining divorce rates, Goode suggested that rising divorce rates may represent a “sifting device,” whereby the society in question makes greater use of an already established social procedure to “tame” disruptions in other parts of the social system.
Family Unit/System cont’d • Family Unit: Refers to the modern understanding of the family as a self-sustaining group. • Family System: Refers to the traditional understanding of the family as an interdependent group of individuals who work together as a micro-social system.
Effects of Industrialization on Conjugal Nuclear Families • With industrialization, economic production began to take place in specialized institutions whose market-related, instrumental relationships were fundamentally incompatible with family ties. Family relations became separated from work and community, even as they became more emotionally intense.
Gender Inequality at Home • Increasing individuality and the length/complexity of socialization was caused as a result of industrialization. However, autonomy was restricted between male and female roles.
Gender Inequality (cont’d) • In the home-centered agricultural production of more traditional societies, women had been able to play important economic roles. After the early years of industrialization, women were relegated to the home, which had changed to a place for homemaking.
Gender Inequality cont’d • Autonomy was gained, yet men continued to dominate women and gender became even more sharply differentiated. Patriarchyplayed an important role in creating serious strain on autonomy for women who were tied to child-rearing and to permanent and unbreakable connections through marriage.
Feminist Criticisms • In 1963, Betty Friedan published The Feminine Mystique, which triggered modern feminism, which promoted women’s equality and ending sexist practices while observing how gender and gender inequality are employed and enforced in society. Friedan attributed frustration of middle-class women to male subjugation and their isolation in the public sphere.
The Degendering of Social Life • In 1940, only 14 percent of wives were in the workplace. In 1980, slightly more than 50 percent were employed. Today, 80 percent of married women under 35 years of age hold jobs. • The rise of modern feminism can be attributed to the change in these statistics, creating an increase inwomen’s workforce participation.
The Denaturalization of Reproduction • Reproductive Technology: Technological developments, ranging from contraception to artificial insemination, that have allowed sex to be entirely separated from child-bearing.
The Conservative Backlash • Due to the dramatic changes in defining the family, relationships, and labor autonomy, many critics say that there has become aloss of family values: • The supposed postmodern phenomenon whereby the family is breaking down and its significance is declining.
Study Questions • What does it mean to have a “naturalistic” approach toward marriage and the family? What are the limitations of this view? • How did modern sociology define marriage and the family? Why were they viewed as highly evolved adaptations to the demands of modern life?
Study Questions (continued) • What four trends in marriage statistics in the last three decades have posed a major challenge to the naturalistic view of marriage? • What is the difference between the consanguineal family and the conjugal nuclear family? What terms did William J. Goode introduce to make a similar distinction?
Study Questions (continued) • What is the advantage of the consanguineal family? • How did modernization, in terms of both its values and the transformation of economic production, contribute to the decline of the consanguineal family?
Study Questions (continued) • In what ways did industrialization transform gender relations and the economic role of women? • What is meant by the “degendering” of social life? What other related processes are transforming and denaturalizing the family in post-modern society? What are some of the effects or results of these processes?