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Title: Marriages and Families: Changes, Choices, and Constraints Seventh Edition


1
Marriages and FamiliesChanges, Choices, and
ConstraintsSeventh Edition Nijole V.
Benokraitis Chapter One The Changing Family
2
What Is a Family?
  • Families are more fluid than they were in the
    past.
  • Many changes in the family reflect adaptations to
    larger societal transformations.
  • As a country, we continue to cling to a number of
    myths about the families of past generations.

3
What Is a Family?
  • The meaning of family changes over time and
    contexts and cultures.
  • There is no standard universal definition of a
    family it exists in many forms and arrangements
    are often complex.

4
What Is a Family?
  • For the purposes of this class, a family is an
    intimate group of two or more people who
  • Live together in a committed relationship.
  • Care for one another and any children.
  • Share activities and close emotional ties.

5
What Happensin the Future?
  • Definitions of the family may become even more
    complex in the future. For some, family includes
    fictive kin who are accepted as part of the
    family group but have no blood ties.
  • Because of the recent rise in single parenthood,
    fictive kin have become more important in our
    overall view of the family.

6
Family Functions
  • No matter the culture, family provides certain
    functions for society and for its own members.
  • Family forms vary across cultures and even within
    cultures.
  • Globally, family provides five very basic and
    important functions.

7
Five Functions of the Family
  • 1. Regulation of sexual activity
  • 2. Procreation and socialization
  • 3. Economic security
  • 4. Emotional support
  • 5. Social class placement

8
Regulation of Sexual Activity
  • The family provides norms for sexual activity
    including the incest taboo.
  • The incest taboo forbids people who are too
    closely related by blood from having sexual
    activity and producing childrenchildren from
    these unions can have an increased risk of birth
    defects.
  • Families also prevent doubts about the legitimacy
    of children and property rights in some cultures.

9
Procreation and Socialization
  • Procreation is an essential function of the
    family because it ensures that society will
    continue.
  • Through socialization, children learn the rules
    and customs of their culture and the first place
    they are socialized is in the family.

10
Economic Security
  • The family is an important economic unit that
    provides financial security and stability.
  • Families provide for their own physical survival.
  • There are several family forms where one or both
    parents work outside the home, but more and more
    in our society it is becoming imperative that
    both parents work at full-time jobs to support
    their family.

11
Emotional Support
  • Emotional support is probably one of the most
    important aspects of family. Charles Horton
    Cooley proposed the concept of primary groups and
    said that family is the main primary group in
    every society.
  • Our families are our emotional steadfast and
    enduring anchor throughout our lives.

12
Social Class Placement
  • A social class is a category of people who have a
    similar standing or rank in society.
  • We are all born into a specific social class
    based on things like our parents income,
    education, job, attitudes, and values.
  • Social class affects many aspects of family life.

13
What Is Marriage?
  • Marriage is a socially approved mating
    relationship that people expect to be stable and
    enduring. Some form of marriage is practiced in
    every society, although there are many forms.

14
What Is Marriage?
  • Ceremonial marriage is one in which the couple
    follows procedures specified by the state or
    other jurisdiction. It is like a legal contract.

15
What Is Marriage?
  • Common-law marriages are ones in which people
    establish a relationship and consider themselves
    husband and wife, however, they have never
    performed a ceremony to solidify their
    commitment.
  • Generally there are three requirements for
    common-law marriages
  • They must live together.
  • They must present themselves as husband and wife.
  • They can have no future plans to marrythey
    consider themselves married already.

16
Endogamy and Exogamy
  • Endogamy requires people to marry or have sexual
    relations within a certain group. These might
    include racial or ethnic groups or clans or
    tribes.
  • Exogamy permits marriage outside of ones own
    group. For example in the United States, 24
    states prohibit marriage between first cousins.
  • Even when there are no laws regarding who we
    can marry, societal norms and traditions often
    guide who we marry.

17
Nuclear and Extended Families
  • Western societies tend to have nuclear families
    that are made up of married parents and their
    biological or adopted children.
  • In much of the rest of the world, however,
    extended families are much more common, where
    parents and children and other kin such as aunts,
    uncles, and cousins all live under the same roof.

18
Nuclear and Extended Families
  • Extended families, however, are becoming more
    common in industrialized countries as
    single-parent families become more common and
    need more support.
  • Because the rates of unmarried people who are
    living together are high, nuclear families
    comprise only 23 of all U.S. families, down from
    40 in 1970.

19
Where Do Families Live?
  • In a patrilocal residential pattern, the newly
    married couple lives with the husbands family.
  • In a matrilocal residential pattern, the couple
    lives with the wifes family.
  • In a neolocal residential pattern, the couple
    sets up its own household.
  • Often residential patterns reflect who has
    authority in the family.

20
Monogamy and Polygamy
  • In monogamy, one person is married exclusively to
    one other person.
  • In the United States, because divorce and
    remarriage rates are high, serial monogamy is
    practiced. We are married to only one person at
    a time, but in at least half of marriages, we are
    married to more than one person over our
    lifetime.

21
Monogamy and Polygamy
Polygamy is when a man or a woman has two or more
spouses. Over 1,000 cultures worldwide allow
some form of polygamy. Polygyny Polyandry
22
The Family and Society
  • Families are largely influenced by the society
    they live in and the societal changes going on
    around them.
  • Because much of the worlds population lives in
    developing countries, many of the worlds
    children live in extended families.
  • By contrast, in the U.S. (by 2007) one in four
    children lives in a mother-only home.

23
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24
The Family and Society
  • Many people are concerned about the demise of the
    nuclear family. However, many social scientists
    contend that seeing the nuclear family as the
    only natural kind of family ignores other types
    of families, such as gay and lesbian families.

25
Diversity of Family Life
  • Clearly, there are many family forms throughout
    the world and we cannot measure any one type
    against another type.
  • We sometimes think of idealized families as
    what we would call nuclear families but these
    expectations are changing as well.

26
Myths about Families
  • Myths about families can be functional and
    dysfunctional. Myths are dysfunctional when they
    have negative consequences that disrupt a family.
  • Myths can be perpetuated by the mass media and we
    can try to live up to these idealized standards
    of family behavior and function.

27
Myths Abound
  • There are several types of myths about families
    in our society
  • Myths about what is naturalfor instance is it
    natural to grow up and get married and have a
    family?
  • Myths about the self sufficient familymost
    families need some support at one time or another
    during their lifetime.

28
Myths Abound
  • Myths about the family as a loving refugeof
    course one of the main functions of families is
    to provide emotional support, but family also
    tends to be the most violent social system in our
    society.
  • Myths about the perfect marriage or the perfect
    familyoften our expectations about marriage and
    the reality we face when we get married clash.

29
Three Opposing Views
  • The family is deteriorating
  • This view of the family says that divorce,
    economic decline, and the decline of two-parent
    intact families have hurt the institution of
    family.

30
Three Opposing Views
The family is changing This view looks at the
changes in family life as just that, changes.
Proponents of this view say that families are
indeed changing, but adapting, to a new economic
environment in which it is necessary for both
parents to work outside the home.
31
Three Opposing Views
The family is stronger than ever This views the
family as much more loving than it was in the
past. Because people are living longer, more
generations are getting to know one another and
becoming stronger family units.
32
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33
Trends in Changing Families
  • The family is changing due to demographic
    transformations. The racial and ethnic
    composition of families and economic
    transformations all play a role in these changes.

34
Demographic Changes
  • U.S. birthrates have declined in recent years.
  • The average age of the population has risen from
    17 in the mid-1800s to 37 in 2007!
  • Both of these phenomenon have changed society and
    the way families live.

35
Other Changes
  • Other changes that have impacted families in the
    last 50 years are
  • Changes in family and non-family households (see
    following slide)
  • Singles and cohabiting couples (see next slide)
  • Marriage-Divorce-Remarriage (see next slide)
  • Employed mothers (see next slide)
  • One-parent families (see next slide)
  • Older people (see next slide)

36
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37
Racial and Ethnic Diversity
  • Ethnic families are booming. Americas
    multicultural umbrella includes about 150
    distinct ethnic or racial groups. By 2025, only
    58 of the population will be white.
  • Because of huge waves of immigrations, one in
    five people are either foreign born or
    first-generation U.S. citizens.
  • Ethnic families speak many languages, thus making
    the U.S. more multilingual.

38
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39
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40
Why Are Families Changing?
  • Micro-level influences on the family
  • There are many influences on the family at the
    micro-level. Decisions family members make
    affect everyone in the family unit, however, we
    must not blame all change on personal choice.
    There are many macro-level influences over which
    the family or the individual has no control.

41
Macro-Level Influences
  • Economic Forces
  • In the later part of the 20th century, many
    manufacturers moved their factories overseas to
    save money, thus unemployment rates went up,
    especially for low-skilled jobs.

42
Macro-Level Influences
  • Technological Innovations
  • We live longer. Medical technology allows us to
    live full lives, however, poverty becomes an
    issue for many elderly.
  • Other technological changes like email, the
    Internet, instant messaging, texting, and cell
    phones have helped and hurt our families and
    their ties to each other and to outside
    resources.

43
Other Macro-Level Influences
  • The mass media, including television and video
    games, have had a huge impact on our overall
    culture. Popular culture which includes
    television, the Internet, pop music, magazines,
    radio, advertising, sports, hobbies, fads,
    fashion, etc., is especially influential in
    informing and misinforming us about family and
    culture.

44
Other Macro-Level Influences
  • Social Movements
  • Over the years, a number of social movements have
    changed family life, including the civil rights
    movement, the gay rights movement, and most
    recently a marriage movement.
  • All of these social movements have had a huge
    impact on our families and our larger society.

45
A Global Family Perspective
  • Understanding other cultures is essential to
    understanding ourselves and our place in the
    world. It is important to know and to understand
    the plights of underdeveloped countries and how
    these affect our own country, and how our country
    and its policies affect other countries.
  • Understanding other cultures gives us a less
    ethnocentric view of the world and challenges us
    to put ourselves in someone elses shoes.

46
Families Are Transforming
  • Whether we want to believe it or not, families
    are transforming, not destroying themselves.
  • In the end, people create families that met their
    needs for love and security.
  • Now more than ever there are expanded choices
    about family and family forms!
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