HOW HAVE HUMANS DEALT WITH THE MATTERS SURROUNDING REPRODUCTION AND INHERITANCE? BLOOD MAY BE THICKER THAN WATER…BUT WHOSE BLOOD IS IT? Fernando Seeks.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Family and Human Sexuality
Advertisements

Sex and Marriage.
Robert Wonser Introduction to Sociology
Marriage and Family. Unit Learning Objectives  Identify Leach’s argument for what marriage can, but does not always, accomplish.  Describe incest and.
Systems of Mate Selection Arranged Marriages, Autonomous Marriages, and “In Between” Marriages.
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.
Sex / Marriage - QUIZ.
Chapter 9 Marriage, Family and Domestic Groups. Chapter Questions What are some of the universal functions of marriage and the family? What are some of.
Marriage ANTH 321: Kinship and Social Organization Kimberly Porter Martin, PH.D.
The Meaning of Marriage Different Types of Marriages Defining Marriage Defining the Family Functions of Marriages and Families Contemporary View.
Marriage, Family, and Domestic Groups. Marriage Societies regulate Organization of labor Responsibility for childcare Organize individual’s rights and.
Marriage
Marriages and Families
 Family usually valued the most.  Family life changing in Canada. Why?  Rising divorce rates  More single-parent families  Same –sex couples.
Women and Families. What Is a Family? A family is a group of people who are connected to one another by consanguineal, affinal or fictive kin ties.
The basic social building blocks in most societies are kinship systems and/or household forms: (families).
Family, kinship, and marriage
Family: Different Theories. Institution A relatively long-standing social arrangement, made up of a stable set of values, norms, attitudes, and behaviors.
Problems, Conflict and Power in a marriage. What problems do young married couples anticipate? Communication Communication Jealousy - comes from uncertainty.
 “a socially legitimate sexual union, begun with a public announcement and with some idea of permanence, and assumed with more or less explicit contract.”
Understanding the Family Roderick Graham. Basic Ideas About The Family Sociologists study the family because it is the primary agent of socialization.
1 - Family and Marriage Across Cultures
The Meaning of Marriage and the Family Key Terms
© 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 1 ©2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Marriage What Is Marriage? Incest and Exogamy Explaining.
Cultural Anthropology
Chapter Preview 1 Chapter Preview · Section 1 Family and Marriage Across Cultures (pages 348–356) In all societies, the family has been the most important.
Overview of Mate Selection Theories. Evolutionary Psychology Natural selectionNatural selection origins of human characteristics can be traced back to.
Women in Islamic Society
Sociology 101 Chapter 11 Marriage & Family. Introduction Cultural factors play a major role in how marriage is defined and how it functions How we define.
Sociology.  1. describe basic family structure and how it has changed from the past 2. Do you think that the statistics about the 50% divorce rate in.
( 1 of 14 ) Chapter 11 Families and Intimate Relationships.
Chapter 9 Marriage and the Family. What We Will Learn  Is the family found in all cultures?  What functions do family and marriage systems perform?
 Young Adulthood and Middle Adulthood Sexuality  The Elderly and Sexuality  Love and Emotions.
Marriage and Family.
Elder’s Qualifications: Family Titus 1:5-9. False Ideas Results –Unqualified men are appointed –Qualified men are not appointed –Only God’s qualifications.
Genes, Culture, and Gender Copyright © 2008 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Gender Gender: the characteristics people associate with male and female.
Marriage & Kinship. Kinship  Relationship between any entities that share a genealogical origin, through either biological, cultural, or historical descent.
+ Marriage Introduction to Family Studies FCST 200.
Chapter 12 - The family Family Systems Family - group of people who are related by marriage, blood, or adoption nuclear family - one or both parents and.
How Are Societies Organized? Commonalities Across Time and Space.
Sociology. What is the Family? Diversity in Families Sociological Perspectives on the family Homogamy and Propinquity Doing the work of the family Family.
Masai COMING OF AGE. Masai customs are remarkable, especially the ceremonies that mark the entry into adulthood; a defining time for all Masai people.
Solving the Problem of Cooperation Marriage and Family.
Group #14 Test of power point Michi, Tash, Princess, Steph.
FAMILY IS THE BASIC UNIT AND ONE OF THE MOST IMPORTANT INSTITUTIONS IN A SOCIETY FAMILY NUCLEAR EXTENDED MORE COMMON IN USA, ESPECIALLY FOR THOSE BORN.
Chapter 9 Marriage, Family and Domestic Groups. Chapter Questions What are some of the universal functions of marriage and the family? What are some of.
Chapter 14 The Family: Basic Concepts  Family: a social institution found in all societies that unites people in cooperative groups to oversee the bearing.
Sex, Marriage and Family Part II. Functions of Marriage Generally, marriage confers exclusive sexual access to a woman on her husband Generally, marriage.
Chapter 16, The Family The Nature of Families Perspectives on the Family Dynamics of Mate Selection and Marriage.
Family Systems and Functions.  Family is a group of people who are related by marriage, blood, or adoption and often live together and share economic.
Chapter 15, Families and Intimate Relationships Key Terms.
Ball State University Finding the Road in Indiana.
Formation of Groups Marriage and Family Marriage …one variable in the formation of kinship groups (affinal relatives). The other is descent (consanguineal.
Chapter 9 Family and Household.
MARRIAGE Chapter 20. Marriage Different to each society 1951 – a union between a man and a woman such that children born are recognized as legitimate.
Sex and Marriage.
Marriage, Family & Kinship patterns.
CHAPTER 8 This chapter introduces students to the roles that families, kinship, and marriage play in society. It discusses the different classifications.
Theories of Attraction and Mate Selection
Socialization.
Chapter 9 Marriage and the Family
Chapter 11 - The Family.
Family pt. 2.
Chapter 9, Marriage, Family, and Residence
Socialization.
Chapter 11 The Changing Family.
The Family in Cross-Cultural Perspective
9. Family.
Unit 3 ~ Chapter 8 Types of Marriages Around the World.
Culture as an agent of socialization: Kinship Systems
Presentation transcript:

HOW HAVE HUMANS DEALT WITH THE MATTERS SURROUNDING REPRODUCTION AND INHERITANCE? BLOOD MAY BE THICKER THAN WATER…BUT WHOSE BLOOD IS IT? Fernando Seeks a Wife: Sex and Blood

Marriage, Family and Household… Fernando has lost his wife. Two weeks ago. What does he do about it?

What Fernando was doing, so soon after his wifes death, was seeking out a partner who would perform the tasks that would complement his own, and thus ensure the continuity of his household. The women he approached were each in a similar structural situation: they were widows whose husbands had recently passed away. So continuity of the household is paramount and the notion of romantic love is secondary.

Cross cultural comparison in anthropology There is tremendous variation found around notions of kin, marriage and living arrangement. Types of Marriage (Wikipedia) Why is that? …related to where they live, how they live?

Cohesion is important to human social groups. Marriage practice is a way to retain social cohesion and to keep the group intact. The capacity to form tightly knit social groups can be seen as a key adaptive strategy. Highly functional foraging unit…

Problems with…Polygyny Polygyny has some interesting consequences for a society. Male/female ratios tend to be about 50/50 in the world when left to "natural" forces. When one man marries say 4 wives, then three men, theoretically, do without. If this is a repeated pattern in a society this tends to drive up the marriage age for men--they have to wait to get married and drives down the marriage age for women--they are married off young because they are in short supply and, thus, desirable. Society-wide over time you get a pattern of older men with multiple wives and younger men without any wives. Some men will, always do without. Powerful older men end up dominating the society and women (girls) get apportioned to them.

The societal problem that often results (and all societies have problems that they deal with because of their structural organization) is a large number of young men who can, potentially, cause trouble for their elders. After all, the women may find them more attractive than their elder husbands. The solution of the Masai, for example, for many years was to send the young men away to do other things; cattle raiding/warfare, for example.

Levirate and sororate… Typical of patriarchal societies… Ingenious means to maintain social relationships/ social structure…

When Does Life Begin? A Cross-cultural Perspective on the Personhood of Fetuses and Young children …it has been difficult for participants in the debate to acknowledge the extent to which human life and personhood are culturally constructed. The social construction of personhood varies according to the environmental, cosmological, and historical circumstances of different societies. This means that people are defined by people.