Domestic Life

January 8, 2018 | Author: Anonymous | Category: Arts & Humanities, Gender Studies, Human Sexuality
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Marriage, Family and Domestic Groups

Chapter Questions What are some of the universal functions of marriage and the family?  What are some of the rule that regulate marriage in different societies?  How can these rules be explained? 

Chapter Questions 

 

How do arranged marriage and romantic love relate to the values of marriage and family in different societies? What kinds of changes are taking place in the family in the United States? How does a society’s subsistence strategy influence the shape of the family and the household?

Household Forms  

Single-person Nuclear 



dominant in foraging and industrial cultures

Polygamous and Extended   

dominant in horticultural, pastoral societies household may contain 50 members will decline with industrialization?

Nuclear Family A

husband, a wife, and their children.  High rates of divorce and remarriage create complicated kinship networks.

Composite Family  Aggregates

of nuclear families linked by a common spouse.  Example: Polygynous household consisting of one man with several wives.

Extended Family Blood relations extending over three or more generations.  Economic advantages: keeps land intact and provides security in times of crisis.  Provides a sense of participation and dignity for the older family members. 

Households as Social Units 

Spouse/Partner relationships 

studies suggest marital satisfaction is strongly correlated to sexual activity

Sibling relationships  Domestic violence 

Males as perpetrators, women as victims is found in all cultures  More common where men control wealth 

Households in Social Change 

International immigration 

challenges for parents and siblings

Shrinking households in the US  Increasing move away from nuclear households in industrialized cultures 

Definitions of Marriage 

Customs and obligations for the relationship between a sexually cohabiting adult male and female, between them and children they produce, and between their kin groups.

OR 

A socially sanctioned form of heterosexual mating and co-residence establishing duties and obligations with respect to sex and reproduction; variant forms are homosexual mating and childless marriages.

Marriage Rules: Number of Spouses  All

societies have rules about how many spouses a person can have at one time.  Monogamy is the norm only in Europe and north America.  75% of the world’s societies prefer plural marriage.

Basic Forms of Marriage 

MONOGAMY: Marriage with one spouse exclusively and for life.



SERIAL MONOGAMY: Marriage with one spouse at a time but with remarriage after death or divorce.



POLYGAMY: Marriage with more than one spouse at a time.

Forms of Polygamy 

Polygyny A rule permitting a man to have more than one wife at a time. 



Sororal polygyny A form of polygyny in which a man marries sisters

Polyandry A rule permitting a woman to have more than one husband at a time. 

Fraternal polyandry A custom whereby a woman marries a man and his brothers.

Functions of Marriage Regulates sexual access.  Creates a family.  Expands social group. 

Marriage Customs, rules, and obligations for relationships between:  A sexually cohabiting man and woman  Parents and children  Families of the bride and groom

Marriage Regulates Sexual Access Reasons:  Limits sexual competition.  Provides stability for children.  Allows for stable economic exchange.

Marriage Establishes Family Structures Marriage provides a stable structure:  The male can provide food and protection.  The female can nurse and nurture the children.

Marriage Expands Social Groups Links different families and kin groups.  Leads to cooperation beyond the primary husband-wife pair.  Allows people to share resources.  Benefits the survival of the species. 

A marriage is everyone’s business 

 

Arranged marriage The process by which senior family members exercise a great deal of control over the choice of their children’s spouses. The obligations of a marriage encompass everyone in the extended family These binding social and economic alliances are seldom left to chance, or to unmarried young people.

Marriage is the Economic and Political Union of Two Families 





Bride service Work that the groom performs for his bride’s family for a variable length of time either before or after the marriage. Bridewealth Goods presented by the groom’s kin to the bride’s kin to legitimize a marriage. Dowry Presentation of goods by the bride’s kin to the family of the groom or to the couple.

Marriage Rules: Exogamy Rules specifying that a person must marry outside a particular group.  Almost universal within the primary family group.  Leads to alliances between different families and groups. 

Marriage Rules: Endogamy 

Rules that marriage must be within a particular group.  In India, the caste is an endogamous group.  In the U.S., social classes tend to be endogamous.

Marriage Rules: Incest Taboos Prohibit sexual relations between relatives.  Universal to most cultures.  Exceptions :  Brother-sister marriages among royalty in ancient Egypt  Traditional Hawaiian society 

Reasons for Incest Taboos Avoids inbreeding.  Prevents disruption in the nuclear family.  Directs sexual desires outside the family.  Forces people to marry outside the family and create a larger social community. 

Preferential Marriage Rules 

Rules about the preferred categories of relatives for marriage partners: 



Levirate The custom whereby a man marries the widow of a deceased brother. Sororate When a man’s wife dies, her sister is given to him as a wife.

Primary Marriage Rights Sexual access of husband and wife to each other.  Obligations by one or both parents to care for children born to the union.  Rights of husband and wife to the economic services of the other. 

Divorce Research suggests divorce rate is lower in unilineal descent cultures

Gender affects ability to divorce

Bilineal descent cultures have a more fluid system of joining and breaking up In multi-spouse marriages, two wives are more stable than three or more

Widowhood and Remarriage 

In some cultures, women’s position as a widow is often marked symbolically 

 



modest clothes asexual little food intake

Remarriage is dependent on economic factors and gender expectations

Chapter 9, Marriage, Family and Domestic Groups Key Terms



Exogamy A rule specifying that a person must marry outside a particular group.



Endogamy A rule prescribing that marriage must be within a particular group.



Cross cousins The children of a parent’s siblings of the opposite sex. (mother’s brothers, father’s sisters)



Parallel cousins The children of a parent's same-sex siblings. (mother’s sisters, father’s brothers)



Unilineal descent A rule specifying that membership in a descent group is based on links through either the maternal or the paternal line; but not both.



Levirate The custom whereby a man marries the widow of a deceased brother.



Sororate The custom whereby, when a man’s wife dies, her sister is given to him as a wife.



Monogamy A rule that permits a person to be married to only one spouse at a time.



Polygamy A rule allowing more than one spouse.



Polygyny A rule permitting a man to have more than one wife at a time.



Polyandry A rule permitting a woman to have more than one husband at a time.



Soroal polygyny A form of polygyny in which a man marries sisters.



Fraternal polyandry A custom whereby a woman marries a man and his brothers.



Arranged marriage The process by which senior family members exercise a great deal of control over the choice of their children’s spouses.



Bride service Work that the groom performs for his bride’s family for a variable length of time either before or after the marriage.



Bridewealth Goods presented by the groom’s kin to the bride’s kin to legitimize a marriage.



Dowry Presentation of goods by the bride’s kin to the family of the groom or to the couple.



Nuclear family The family organized around the relationship between husband and wife. A nuclear family consists of a husband, a wife, and their children.



Conjugal tie The relationship between a husband and wife formed by marriage.



Extended family Family based on blood relations extending over three or more generations.



Consanguineal Related by birth.



Domestic group A household unit, that usually, but not always, consists of members of a family.



Neolocal residence System under which a couple establishes an independent household after marriage.



Composite (compound) family An aggregate of nuclear families linked by a common spouse.



Patrilocal residence System under which a bride lives with her husband’s family after marriage.



Patrilineage A lineage formed by descent in the male line.



Matrilineage A lineage formed by descent in the female line.



Matrilocal residence System under which a husband lives with this wife's family after marriage.



Avunculocal residence System under which a married couple lives with husband's mother’s brother.



Bilocal residence System under which the married couple has the choice of living with the husband's or wife’s family.

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