to know from coontz (2000) reason for initial historical “decline” of extended kinship myths...

Post on 17-Dec-2015

212 Views

Category:

Documents

0 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

TRANSCRIPT

To Know from Coontz (2000)• Reason for initial historical “decline” of extended

kinship• Myths regarding:– “Affective individualism” & family Rs– Time spent with children– Nuclear or other “ideal” structures

• Aspects of family economy:– Sources of resource-attainment– Different ways resources are distributed within families

• Various expectations of roles for children• Pros vs. Cons of marriage/family life vs. single• Importance of context when studying families

• Lineage emphases–Greek “families” among the gods– Judeo-Christian Adam & Eve–Roman paterfamilias–Dynasties (Assyria, Egypt, China)

–Totem Poles (indigenous peoples)

–European “ancestries”–U.S. mandated recording (christenings, marriages,

burials) in 1632

Historical Record• Upper class bias (e.g., nobles, wars, empires)

• 1st study “ordinary” families

3

Primacy of Public Families (U.S.-Euro colonies)

– Performed public services – • All was public business • Houses lacked internal privacy

– Diverse structures – Marriage often unofficial

4

Rise of “Private” Family (1900-Present)

Early Decades:• Increase in :– – – rate– Privacy & private families–

• Decline in:– – Family dominance in people’s lives

• Emphases on: – Family as source of emotional satisfaction (rather than solely

economic/material needs)5

Recent distinct “group” trends• Great Depression Generation

– Family finances reduced– Father-authority undermined– Divorce-rate – Marriage & childbearing – Children

• Baby Boom Generation– Renewed focus on marriage & children – Highpoint of breadwinner-homemaker “model”– Not really “traditional family”–

• 1960s-Beyond– Birthrate – Married – Divorce-rate 1960s–70s– Emergence of “ ” – Children delayed for education

Life-course perspective on 20th century social change

7

Transition over time… “F”amily

Extended Powerful Context for life Social, financial support Based on economics, obligation

To…

“f”amily Conjugal Weaker Isolated from society More freedom Voluntary, based on emotional bond

• “There is no golden age of the family gleaming at us in the far back historical past…Desertion by spouses, illegitimate children, and other conditions that are considered characteristics of modern times existed in the past as well.” (Zinn & Eitzen, 2002, p. 8)

top related