CH 15
CH 15
CH 15
Families
Chapter Outline
Defining the Family
Sociological Theory and Families
Diversity Among Contemporary
American Families
Marriage and Divorce
Changing Families, Changing
Society
Traditional Definition of
Family
Social unit of people related through
marriage, birth, or adoption who reside
together in sanctioned relationships,
engage in economic cooperation, socially
approved sexual relations, and
reproduction and child rearing.
Contemporary Definition of
Family
Primary group of people—usually related
by ancestry, marriage, or adoption—who
form a cooperative economic unit and
care for any young who consider their
identity to be attached to the group; and
are committed to maintaining the group.
Polling Question
The strength of the American family is
declining.
A.) Strongly agree
B.) Agree somewhat
C.) Unsure
D.) Disagree somewhat
E.) Strongly disagree
Features of Kinship Systems
Number of marriage partners permitted at
one time.
Who is permitted to marry whom.
How descent is determined.
How property is passed on.
Where the family resides.
How power is distributed.
Number of Marriage Partners
Polygamy is the practice of men or
women having multiple marriage partners.
Polygamy usually involves polygyny, one
man having more than one wife.
Polyandry is the practice of a woman
having more than one husband.
Monogamy is a sexually exclusive
marriage with one spouse.
Who Marries Whom?
Exogamy is the practice of selecting mates from
outside one’s group.
Endogamy is the practice of selecting mates
from within one’s group.
The group may be based on religion, territory,
racial identity, and so forth.
The incest taboo, considered to be universal, is
a cultural norm forbidding sexual relations and
marriage between certain kin.
Property and Descent
Kinship systems shape the distribution of
property in society by prescribing how lines of
descent are determined.
In patrilineal kinship systems, family lineage is
traced through the family of the father.
Matrilineal kinship systems are those in which
ancestry is traced through the mother.
In bilateral kinship systems, descent is traced
both through the father and the mother.
Place of Residence
In the United States, newly married couples are
expected to establish independent households.
In patrilocal kinship systems, after marriage, a
woman is separated from her own kinship group
and resides with the husband or his kinship
group.
In matrilocal kinship systems, a woman
continues to live with her family of origin.
Neolocal residence is the practice of the new
couple establishing their own residence.
Who Holds Power?
Marriage systems vary according to who holds
power in the marriage.
A patriarchy is a society or group where men
have power over women.
In a matriarchy women hold power.
In egalitarian societies men and women share
power equally, are equally valued by all societal
members, have equal access to resources, and
share decision making.
Extended and Nuclear
Families
Extended families are the whole network of
parents, children, and other relatives who form
a family unit.
Extended families are common among the
urban poor because they develop a
cooperative system of social and economic
support.
The nuclear family is comprised of one married
couple residing together with their children.
Theoretical Perspectives on
Families
Functionalism Meet the need to socialize
children and reproduce
new members.
A.) Yes
B.) No
Marriage and Divorce Rates
Factors in Rise in Divorce Rate
In earlier eras, people died younger, and
the average length of marriages was
shorter.
The cultural orientation toward
individualism may predispose people to
terminate a marriage in which they are
unhappy.
Factors in Rise in Divorce Rate
To people in unhappy marriages, divorce,
though painful and financially risky, can be a
positive option.
The belief that couples should stay together for
their children is giving way to a belief that a
marriage with protracted conflict is more
detrimental to than divorce.
Family Violence
The National Violence Against Women Office
estimates:
25% of women will be raped, physically
assaulted, or stalked by an intimate partner
in their lifetime.
22% experience physical assault