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CHAPTER 16: MARRIAGE AND FAMILY
SOCI 100: INTRODUCTION TO SOCIOLOGY Fall 2012 Instructor: Deniz Yükseker
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CHAPTER OUTLINE What is family and what is marriage?
Cultural themes about families and marriage How do sociological theories explain families? Practices of family life
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WHAT IS A FAMILY? A social institution that unites individuals into cooperative groups that oversee the bearing and raising of children
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WHAT IS A FAMILY? Family unit: a social group of two or more people, related by blood, marriage or adoption Household: people who live together Kinship: a social bond based on blood Affinity: social bonds based on marriage
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WHAT IS MARRIAGE? Socially approved mating arrangements, whose beginning is usually marked by a ritual (a wedding) A marriage often (but not always) involves economic cooperation, sexual activity and childbearing between two people.
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CULTURAL THEMES ABOUT MARRIAGE AND FAMILY
Mate selection Endogamy Exogamy Incest taboo Number of spouses Monogamy Polygamy Polygyny Polyandry
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CULTURAL THEMES... Patrilineage Matrilineage
Systems of descent Patrilineage Matrilineage Bilineal system of descent Authority structure within a marriage/family Patriarchy Living arrangements Patrilocal residence Matrilocal residence Neolocal residence
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Mate selectION Arranged marriages
Marriages based on the individual choice of two people love match New methods of mate selection?
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FACTS ABOUT TURKEY Average marriage age: 1935 Men: 23, women: : Men: 27, women: 23 Source: Hacettepe University Institute of Population Studies, 2008
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FACTS ABOUT TURKEY Who decided on the marriage? (2003 figures) Families: 54.8 % Self: 40.5 % Abduction/elopement: 4.6 % Kinship relations between spouses: Kin: 21.7 % Non-kin: 78.3 % Source: Turkish Demographic and Health Survey, 2003
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FACTS ABOUT TURKEY Households in Istanbul (2008): 70.3 % nuclear families 16.6 singles and single parent families 13 % extended families (1980) 75 % nuclear families 15 % extended families 10 % singles and single parent families Source: Yavuz and Yeşilçaylı, 2012
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HOW DID FAMILIES EVOLVE HISTORICALLY?
Nuclear family: parent and children Extended family: three generations living together
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EXPLAINING FAMILIES Functionalist approach: Families have important social functions. Conflict and feminist approaches: Families reproduce gender and economic inequalities in society.
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Functions of the family
1- Socialization 2- Regulation of sexual activity All societies have some notion of an incest taboo. The incest taboo minimizes sexual competition within a family by delimiting legitimate sexuality to spouses. forges alliances between different families by dictating marriages outside the family.
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Functions of the family
3– Family facilitates the “social placement” of children. 4- Material and emotional security
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Conflict approach 1– The institution of family emerged out of the need to identify heirs, so that men could transfer property to their sons (Friedrich Engels) 2– Men control the sexuality and labor of women in the patriarchal family (socialist feminists). 3– As long as people marry others like themselves, racial and ethnic hierarchies in a society will remain the same. 4- Men benefit from patriarchal families where they have more power, and women do most of the house and care work.
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Practices of Family Life: CARE
A key practice in family life is “care”: caring for: looking after children and parents: this is a form of work caring about: love and affection Most care work is done by women.
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PRACTICES of FAMILY LIFE: Violence
Families are not always “havens” from the dangers of the outside world. They can also contain violence. Family violence: emotional, physical or sexual abuse of one family member by another.
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NEW PRACTICES Families of affinity (families of choice): People with or without blood ties who feel they belong together and wish to define themselves as a family. Definition of family is related to moral and political choices.
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NEW PractICES Cohabitation: sharing of a household by an unmarried couple. Gay marriage Gay parenting More people are choosing to live by themselves.
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