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Choosing a Marriage Partner

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Title: Choosing a Marriage Partner


1
Chapter 7
  • Choosing a Marriage Partner

2
Chapter Outline
  • Love and Marriage?
  • The Marriage Market
  • Homogamy Narrowing the Pool of Eligibles
  • Courtship in a Free-Choice Society
  • Mate Selection and Marriage Stability

3
Arranged Marriages
  • Not uncommon in the less Westernized parts of
    Europe, Asia, and Africa.
  • Couples in arranged marriages are expected to
    develop a loving relationship after the marriage.
  • Arranged marriage developed in collectivist
    societies based on strong extended family ties.
  • In these societies, marriage unites two kinship
    groups as well as two people.

4
Functions of Arranged Marriages
  • Affirms parents power over their children.
  • Helps keep family traditions and value systems
    intact.
  • Helps consolidate and extend family property.
  • Helps young people avoid the uncertainty of
    searching for a mate.

5
If a partner had the qualities you desired,
would you marry if you werent in love?
6
Courtly Love
  • Most marriages in the upper levels of society
    during the Middle Ages were based on property and
    family.
  • Tender emotions were expressed in nonmarital
    relationships in which a knight worshipped his
    lady, and ladies had their favorites.
  • These relationships involved idealization, were
    not necessarily sexually consummated, and did not
    require the parties to live together.

7
The Marriage Market
  • People enter the marriage market and bargain for
    the best buy they can get.
  • Sometimes the exchange involves a bride price
    that the future groom pays the future brides
    family so he can marry her.
  • More often the exchange is accompanied by a
    dowry, money or property brought to the marriage
    by the female.

8
Exchange Theory
  • Individuals pick the relationship that is most
    rewarding or least costly.
  • In romantic relationships individuals have
    resources beauty, personality, status, skills,
    maturity, intellect, originality, etc.
  • Individuals also have costly attributes being
    demanding, low status, geographic
    inaccessibility, etc.

9
The Traditional Exchange
  • Women trade their ability to bear children and
    perform domestic duties, along with sexual
    accessibility and attractiveness, for a mans
    protection, status, and support.
  • Both women and men can experience gender related
    disadvantages in the traditional exchange.

10
The Marriage Gradient
  • The tendency for women to marry up with regard
    to age, education, occupation, and earning
    potential.
  • In about 57 of U.S. married couples, the husband
    is two or more years older than his wife
    however, the wife is older in only 11 of todays
    unions.

11
Homogamy
  • People tend to marry people of similar race, age,
    education, religious background, and social
    class.
  • Endogamy marrying within ones social group.
  • Exogamy marrying outside ones group.
  • Heterogamy, marrying someone dissimilar in race,
    age, education, religion, or social class.

12
Reasons for Homogamy
  • Live in close proximity.
  • Culture encourages people to marry others similar
    to themselves.
  • People are more comfortable with others from
    similar backgrounds.
  • People want to strike a fair exchange.

13
Examples of Heterogamy
  • Interfaith Marriages
  • Interclass Marriages
  • Interracial/interethnic marriages

14
Interracial and Hispanic non-Hispanic Married
Couples, 2002
15
of Racially Homogamous Marriages, 1990
No Diploma No Diploma High School Diploma Some College College Diploma
Whites Whites Whites Whites Whites Whites
Men () 98 98 98 98 98
Women () 97.5 97.5 98 98 98
African Americans African Americans African Americans African Americans African Americans African Americans
Men () Men () 94 93 91 90
Women () Women () 97 97 97 96
16
of Racially Homogamous Marriages, 1990
No Diploma No Diploma High School Diploma Some College College Diploma
Hispanics Hispanics Hispanics Hispanics Hispanics Hispanics
Men () 76 76 67 55 41
Women () 78 78 66 55 34
Asian Americans Asian Americans Asian Americans Asian Americans Asian Americans Asian Americans
Men () Men () 0 21 31 52
Women () Women () 14 11 32 42
17
Heterogamy and Marital Stability
  • Differences in values and interests can result in
    a lack of mutual understanding.
  • Marriage may create conflict between the partners
    and parents, relatives and friends.
  • High divorce rate may reflect that the partners
    have less conventional values.

18
SVR- Stimulus Values Roles Filtering Sequence
  • Stimulus stage - interaction depends on physical
    attraction.
  • Values stage - partners compare values and
    determine whether they are a match.
  • Role compatibility - prospective spouses
    negotiate their marital and leisure roles.

19
Attachment Theory
  • During infancy and childhood, individuals develop
    a style of attaching to others.
  • Children learn and take for granted one of three
    attachment styles
  • Children who trust that their needs will be met
    form a secure attachment style.
  • Children who feel abandoned are likely to acquire
    an insecure/anxious or an avoidant attachment
    style.

20
Purposes of Courtship Patterns
  • Romantic partners try to get to know each other
    better.
  • Partners gain each other's progressive commitment
    to marriage.

21
Dating
  • Emerged at the beginning of the 20th century,
    prevailed in the 1950s and early 1960s, became
    less popular in the late 1960s and early 1970s,
    and became popular in the 1980s.
  • Consists of an exclusive relationship developed
    through a series of appointed meetings.
  • Getting together is courtship in which groups of
    women and men meet at a party or share an
    activity.

22
Margaret Meads Criticisms of Dating
  • Encourages men and women to define heterosexual
    relationships as situational rather than ongoing.
  • Sex becomes depersonalized and genitally oriented
    rather than oriented to the whole person.

23
Margaret Meads Proposal Two-stage Marriage
  • Two stages each with a license, ceremony and
    responsibilities
  • Individual marriage - serious commitment with
    limited responsibilities and no children.
  • Parental marriage - follows if the couple wants
    to continue a relationship and have children.

24
Cohabitation and Marriage
  • Marriages preceded by cohabitation are more
    likely to end in divorce
  • People who cohabitate have liberal attitudes and
    are accepting of divorce.
  • Cohabitating affects individuals so they are more
    likely to divorce.

25
Cohabiting Couples The Paths They Take
Type of Relationship in 198788 All Couples Still Live Together Married Separated
All unmarried couples 100 21 40 39
Substitute for marriage 10 39 25 35
Precursor to marriage 46 17 52 31
26
Cohabiting CouplesThe Paths They Take
Type of Relationship in 198788 All Couples Still Live Together Married Separated
Trial marriage 15 21 28 51
Coresidential dating 29 21 33 46
27
Indicators of Dating Violence
  • Handles ordinary disagreements with inappropriate
    anger or rage.
  • Struggles to regain self-control when a minor
    issue triggers anger.
  • Goes into tirades.

28
Indicators of Dating Violence
  • Quick to criticize or verbally mean.
  • Unduly jealous, restricting and controlling.
  • History of violence in previous relationships.

29
Guidelines for Ending a Relationship David Knox
  1. Decide that terminating the relationship is what
    you really want to do.
  2. Assuming you have definitely determined to break
    up, prepare yourself for waveringbut dont
    change your mind.
  3. Plan the break-up discussion with your partner in
    person, but at a location from which you can
    readily withdraw.

30
Guidelines for Ending a Relationship David Knox
  1. Explain your reasons for breaking up in terms of
    our own values, rather than pointing out what you
    think is wrong with the other person.
  2. Seek out new relationships.

31
Critical Elements of Maturity
  • Emotional maturity - sense of self-worth allows
    intimacy and interdependence.
  • Economic maturity - able to support self and a
    partner if necessary.
  • Value maturity- recognizes and feels confident
    about own personal values.

32
Critical Elements of Maturity
  • Relationship maturity
  • Able to understand a partners point of view.
  • Can make decisions about changing behaviors a
    partner doesnt like.
  • Able to explain own points of view and ask for
    change in partner's behavior.

33
Quick Quiz
34
  • 1. Ahmed concludes that arranged marriage
    performs certain functions. Which of the
    following is NOT one of these?
  • maintains sexual fidelity
  • affirms and strengthens parents power over their
    children
  • enhances the value of the kinship group
  • helps keep the family traditions and value
    systems intact

35
Answer a
  • Ahmed concludes that arranged marriage performs
    certain functions. Maintaining sexual fidelity is
    NOT one of these.

36
  • 2. Marikesh belongs to Asian Indian culture.
    She will soon marry. When she does, Marikesh
    will bring to the marriage a sum of money or
    property. This custom is referred to as
  • marital exchange.
  • a dowry.
  • bride price.
  • endenturement.

37
Answer b
  • Marikesh belongs to Asian Indian culture. She
    will soon marry. When she does, Marikesh will
    bring to the marriage a sum of money or property.
    This custom is referred to as a dowry.

38
  • 3. In the __________ stage of the SVR process,
    prospective spouses test and negotiate how they
    will play their respective marital and leisure
    roles.
  • values
  • role compatibility
  • stimulus
  • socialization

39
Answer b
  • In the role compatibility stage of the SVR
    process, prospective spouses test and negotiate
    how they will play their respective marital and
    leisure roles.

40
  • 4. In Margaret Meads thinking, _________
    marriage involves serious commitmentin which
    each partner would have a deep and continuing
    concern for the happiness of the other.
  • two-stage
  • individual
  • Conjugal
  • parental

41
Answer b
  • In Margaret Meads thinking,individual marriage
    involves serious commitmentin which each
    partner would have a deep and continuing concern
    for the happiness of the other.

42
  • 4. Which of the following guidelines is offered
    by sociologist David Knox for ending a
    relationship?
  • Follow your initial thinking to its logical
    conclusion.
  • Plan the breakup discussion with your partner in
    person, but at a location from which you can
    readily withdraw.
  • Avoid seeking out new relationships.
  • Be sure to make clear what you think is wrong
    with the other person.

43
Answer b
  • Which of the following guidelines is offered by
    sociologist David Knox for ending a relationship
    is Plan the breakup discussion with your partner
    in person, but at a location from which you can
    readily withdraw.
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