Solving the Problem of Cooperation Marriage and Family.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Family and Human Sexuality
Advertisements

Sex, Marriage and Love.
Sex and Marriage.
Marriage and Family. Unit Learning Objectives  Identify Leach’s argument for what marriage can, but does not always, accomplish.  Describe incest and.
Chapter 9 Marriage and the Family Key Terms. ambilocal (bilocal) residence The practice of a newly married couple taking up residence with either the.
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.
Marriage and the Family
Sex, Marriage and Family
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.
Kimberly Martin, Ph.D. ANTH 250: Issues in Anthropology.
***Kinship system: the predominant form of kin relationships in a culture and the kinds of behavior involved. Kinship systems are often linked with the.
Marriage
Marriages and Families
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.
Chapter 16. Every human on earth organizes themselves into families, but the word is difficult to define. Polygyny- more than one wife Polyandry-more.
Marriage and Family How do Anthropologists study Marriage and Family?
Marriage and Family Chapter 12.
Understanding the Family Roderick Graham. Basic Ideas About The Family Sociologists study the family because it is the primary agent of socialization.
The Meaning of Marriage and the Family Key Terms
S EX, M ARRIAGE AND F AMILY Chapter 9. Q UESTIONS … What Is Marriage? What Is Family? What Is the Difference Between Family and Household?
Family and Household. Lecture Outline  What is the family?  What is the difference between family and household?  What are some of the challenges of.
© 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
Social Institutions “The Family”. So, what exactly is a family? The Debate over Family Definitions: a group of people related by either blood, marriage,
Solving the Problem of Cooperation Marriage and Family (Chs. 19, 20) Kinship and Descent (Ch. 21)
Chapter Twelve. Section One A. The family is the most universal social institution B. Definition varies from culture to culture.
THE FAMILY: BASIC CONCEPTS
Family: The Basic Unit of Human Organization If defined functionally, the family is essentially universal. Its structural form and strength, however, vary.
Marriage IGCSE Global Perspectives. Marriage is a social union or legal contract between individuals that create kinship. It is an institution in which.
Chapter 8: Kinship and Marriage
Marriage and Changing Family Arrangements Chapter 12
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?
The Family.
Marriage & Kinship. Kinship  Relationship between any entities that share a genealogical origin, through either biological, cultural, or historical descent.
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.
12.1.  Most universal institution is the family  Make up of the family varies from culture to culture  All families follow similar organizational patterns.
Cultural Anthropology
What is family? –Family is universal, all groups organize members into families, different definitions around the world –Western world family is husband,
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.
Lesson 9: Marriage and the Family
Chapter 7 – Sex and Marriage (Control of Sexual Relations)
Sex, Marriage and Family Part II. Functions of Marriage Generally, marriage confers exclusive sexual access to a woman on her husband Generally, marriage.
Marriage & Family.
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.
Kinship and Descent Genealogical Space – Space that contains all human beings. Kinship and descent are Cultural Universals.
Chapter 15, Families and Intimate Relationships Key Terms.
The Family Chapter 11. Family- a group of people related by marriage, blood, or adoption ex. people living together in same household; sharing space Two.
Chapter 1 The Meaning of Marriage and the Family.
McGraw-Hill © 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Slide 1 SOCIOLOGY The Family and Intimate Relationships 12.
Family What is it?. MODERN FAMILY You Tube Video.
McGraw-Hill © 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Slide 1 SOCIOLOGY Richard T. Schaefer The Family and Intimate Relationships 14.
Kinship, Family, and Marriage
Formation of Groups Marriage and Family Marriage …one variable in the formation of kinship groups (affinal relatives). The other is descent (consanguineal.
October 25, 2011 Lineage and Kinship (cont.) Marriage.
Sex and Marriage.
KINSHIP AND DESCENT MARRIAGE AND FAMILY
Marriage, Family & Kinship patterns.
KINSHIP AND DESCENT MARRIAGE AND FAMILY
KINSHIP AND DESCENT MARRIAGE AND FAMILY
Chapter 9, Marriage, Family and Domestic Groups
Chapter 9 Marriage and the Family
Chapter 11 - The Family.
Chapter 9, Marriage, Family, and Residence
Kimberly Martin, Ph.D. ANTH 250: Issues in Anthropology
Kinship and Descent.
Chapter 15 Families and Intimate Relationships.
Marriage and Changing Family Arrangements
Presentation transcript:

Solving the Problem of Cooperation Marriage and Family

Marriage …one variable in the formation of kinship groups (affinal relatives). The other is descent (consanguineal relatives). Marriage “…a relationship between one or more men (male or female) and one or more women (male or female) recognized by the society as having a continuing claim to the right of sexual access to one another” (Haviland 2003:514). “The notion of marriage as a sacrament and not just a contract can be traced St. Paul who compared the relationship of a husband and wife to that of Christ and his church.” ( ) In a 2005 book, Marriage, a History: From Obedience to Intimacy, or How Love Conquered Marriage, Coontz writes: “Almost every marital and sexual arrangement we have seen in recent years, however startling it may appear, has been tried somewhere before.” (p. 2)

Marriage and Family Conjugal bond – bond between married individuals Affines - relatives by marriage Consanguineal kin - relatives by birth Incest taboo - very strong prohibition against mating within particular group.

Monogamy Polygamy Polygyny Polyandry One spouse Multiple husbands Multiple spouses Multiple wives Rules of Marriage Exogamy Endogamy Marry inside group Marry outside group Incest taboo Strong prohibition against marriage inside group Group marriage Children are offspring of the group Serial marriage Multiple spouses, one at a time Among the Buddhist people of the mountainous Ladakh District of Jammu and Kashmir, who have cultural ties to Tibet, fraternal polyandry is practiced, and a household may include a set of brothers with their common wife or wives. This family type, in which brothers also share land, is almost certainly linked to the extreme scarcity of cultivable land in the Himalayan region, because it discourages fragmentation of holdings.

Marriage and Family Levirate - “brother marriage” Sororate - “sister marriage” …Either of the above may be “anticipatory” Fictive marriage

Marriage and Family Parallel-cousin (= Cousin) Marriage ego's father's brother's children or mother's sister's children. Cross-cousin (X-Cousin) Marriage ego's father's sister's children or mother's brother's children.

Marriage and Family Cross-cousin (X Cousin) Marriage ego's father's sister's children or mother's brother's children.

Marriage and Family X Cousin Marriage in Matrilineal Societies Sometimes prescriptive (should) Sometimes proscriptive (must) adoption fictive

Marriage and Family Family “…in anthropological terms, it is a group composed of a woman, her dependent children, and at least one adult man joined through marriage or blood relationship” (Haviland 2003: 537). Note on co-operation: Human beings, indeed all social animals, are innately co-operative. So far…… The “family” continues to be the most universal form of human social organization. Kathleen Gough specialized in cross cultural studies of the family and attempted this universal definition of family (a definition that applies to all societies): “A married couple or other group of adult kinsfolk who cooperate economically and in the upbringing of children, and all or most of whom share a common dwelling.” Stephanie Coontz, author of The Way We Really Are: Coming to Terms with America's Changing Families and The Way We Never Were: American Families and the Nostalgia Trap, wrote: “Many people hold an image of how American families ‘used to be’ at some particular point in time, and they propose that we return to that ideal. In fact, however, there have been a wide variety of family forms and values in American history, and there is no period in which some ideal family predominated.” The Way We Never Were: American Families and the Nostalgia Trap (1992)

Families are composed of people related to one another by consanguinity and descent. Nuclear families Characterized by independence training …kids are taught to take care of themselves Extended families Characterized by dependence training… kids are taught to depend on other family members Marriage and Family

Traditional functions of families Emotional nurturance Economic Co-operation Sex control Enculturation Physical nurturance Women in Civilian Labor Force: In 1900…20.6% of total …43.5% single women and 5.6% of married women. In 2002…69.6% of total…67.4% single women and 61.0% of married women. U.S. Census Bureau - Marital Status of Women in the Civilian Labor Force:

Related to technology Trends in Marriage and Family … i.e. modern genetics “Brave New World” of ‘Designer Children’ Genetic implications: Choosing or avoiding physical ability or disability Choosing or avoiding behavioral ability or disability Ravitsky, Ethics and Education: The Ethics of Shaping Human Identity