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History of the Family

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Increasing focus on children. Number of children per family declining. Economic shift ... perspective on social change in the 20th century. The American Family? ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: History of the Family


1
History of the Family
2
The American Family?
3
Is the family in decline?
  • A revolution has taken place in family life since
    the late 1960s.
  • Two-thirds of all married women with children
    work outside the home, compared to just 16
    percent in 1950.
  • Half of all marriages end in divorce - twice the
    rate in 1966 and three times the rate in 1950.
  • 20 of women between the ages of 30 and 34 have
    not married and over a quarter have had no
    children, compared to six and eight percent,
    respectively, in 1970.

4
Change is a constant
  • Diversity and change have been the only constants
    in the history of the American family.
  • Recent changes in family life are only the latest
    in a series of disjunctive transformations in
    family roles, functions, and dynamics that have
    occurred over the past three centuries.

5
Origins of family and kinship
  • Evolution of human species
  • Hunters and gatherers
  • Settled agriculture
  • Patrilocal system Women leave home and come in
    as wives for the men who remain there.
  • Matrilocal system Men live with their sisters
    and husbands are temporary visitors in the homes
    of wives.
  • Families developed out of a will to survive,
    prosper, and raise children.

6
Kinship as a weapon of survival
  • The incest taboo restriction on sexual
    intercourse, and hence on marriage, among close
    relatives.
  • The definition of close varies historically and
    cross-culturally.
  • In tribal societies, family ties provide the
    structure that hold the society together.
  • Thus, family is central to the organization of
    society.

7
The American family before 1776
  • American Indian families
  • Importance of tribe to social organization
  • Matrilineal and patrilineal organization
  • European colonists (public family)
  • Family functioned as school, hospital,
    correctional facility, orphanage, nursing home,
    and poor house.
  • Familial mode of production

8
The rise of the modern family
  • 1770s late 1800s
  • Characteristics of new family (middle class)
  • Marriage increasingly based on affection and
    mutual respect
  • Womans role is to take care of children and home
  • Increasing focus on children
  • Number of children per family declining

9
Economic shift
  • Labor market mode of production (not familial)
  • Working for wages, production for exchange.
  • Emergence of commercial capitalism.
  • Solidified during Industrial Revolution (mid
    1800s).
  • Increasingly the workplace and home became
    separated.
  • Erosion of fathers authority over children.

10
Rise of affective individualism
  • Greater consideration of oneself and
    self-satisfaction.
  • Personal gratification in family relationships.
  • Autonomy more important than obligations to
    others.

11
Separate spheres
  • Men work in paid labor force, exchanging labor
    for goods.
  • Women specialize in maintaining the home and
    raising children.
  • Coincided with an extension of childhood
  • Institution of protected features

12
The private family (1900 present)
  • Early 1900s
  • Increase in premarital sex.
  • Drop in the birthrate.
  • New youth culture.
  • Rising divorce rate.
  • Increasing economic independence of women
  • Shift in marriage from institution and economic
    partnership to companionship and emotional
    satisfaction

13
Depression generation (1929-1939)
  • Economic downturn
  • Downward extension of adulthood
  • Undermined authority and prestige of fathers
  • Divorce rate fell
  • Marriage and children postponed
  • Children who grew up in depressed families valued
    marriage and family life more highly

14
1950s generation
  • Post WWII economic expansion.
  • Most unusual and distinctive family patterns of
    century
  • Married at younger ages and had more children
    than any other 20th-century generation (past and
    future!)
  • Strong economy and marriage-childbearing
    orientation produced high point of
    breadwinner/homemaker family

15
1960s families and beyond
  • Postponed marriage and fewer children
  • Increased cohabitation
  • Married women work outside the home in
    ever-larger numbers

16
Percentage never married among men and women aged
20 - 24
17
Percentage of children aged 0-17 living in each
of four types of families
18
A life-course perspective on social change in the
20th century
19
The American Family?
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