Zusammenfassung der Ressource
The Theories on Families
- Functionalist
- Argues that the Nuclear Family is
the most efficient family type in
meeting societys 'Functional Pre
Requisits'
- Murdoch
1949
- Four main functions of the
family: 1.Sexual - Expressing
sexuality in a socially
approved relationship
2.Reproduction - Providing
stability for the reproduction
and rearing of children
3.Socialisation - Where
children learn socially
acceptable behaviour and the
culture of their society
4.Economic - The family
provides food and shelter for
its members
- Say the 4 functions are necessary in
every society, and that the nuclear family
is universal (the best family type in every
society)
- however, the nuclear family is not the
only family arrangement able to carry
out these functions, and many
institutions may take over some
functions eg Socialisation - School
- Functional
Fit
- Funtionalist believe the nuclear family has
replaced the classic extended family and the
main type of family. The family has become:
- Socially Isolated from extended kin
- More reliant on Welfare State and NHS
- Geographically separated from the wider kin
- More reliant on schools and nurseries for childcare
- Functionalists argue that the family is
self-contained and inward looking with little
contacts with neighbours and community. Home
leisure via TV etc have made us more
home-centred and leisure time now tends to be
shared
- Parsons
- Said that there has been a loss of functions since
industrialisation, and that now functions were
being fulfilled by institutions such as the NHS and
education
- Refers to "two basic, irreducible functions" still performed by families
- 1.PRIMARY SOCIALISATION - Families act as factories in that
they socialise children into societies norms and values.
this inturn reinforces the value consensus.
- 2.STABILISATION OF ADULT PERSONALITIES- Stress and pressure utside of
the family can threaten mental health/stability and order. Thus the
family helps stabilise adults via marital supports or playing with
children
- WARM BATH THEORY - Parson argues that the
family offers a 'warm bath of psychological
comfort' against a tough, competitive outside
world
- Argues that in pre-industrial society, the
settled nature of the economy led to
extended families
- Industrial society require mobile work fare and small
nuclear families woh are able to move quickly and
simply - hence why they fit the needs of a modern
industrial society best
- The Button and the Button Hole Theory - he
relationships between a man and a woman are
complimentary to each other, 2 functions working together
- Man - Instrumental Role - Works/Earns money for family
- Woman - Expressive Role - Looks after children/nurtures etc
- Fletcher 1966
- Argues that the modern family
has more functions - not less
- Greater pre-occupation with children's health by parents
- Greater responsibility for protecting children's since
increased legislation
- Important role as unit of consumption
- The family is a 'virtual institution' within society
that meets certain Functionalist Pre-Requisits
that ensures society's survival and keeps it
functioning
- The New Right
- Argue that the traditional nuclear family is the best family type
to fit with society's structure by performing
essential functions
- Traditional Nuclear Family -
Male Instrumental
Role/Female Expressive
Role/Dependant Children
- See Nuclear family as 'natural' due to 'fundamental
biological differences' between the sexes
- Conservative and Anti
Feminist - Oppose diversity
- See growth of family diversity as the cause of many
social problems eg Crime Rates/Dependence on
Welfare/Education Failure etc
- Single Parent Families (SPF)
- Viewed as unnatural and
hamful
- Mothers statistically get custody, resulting
in lack of male role model for boys and thus
higher levels of delinquency
- Argue SPF cannot
discipline children
effectively
- 'Burden' on the welfare state, ineffective
single mothers become married to the
the state and dependant on welfare
rather than a man
- Attack on Feminism?
- Disapproving of working
mothers
- Believe woman should see caring for their
family as 1st priority
- View marriage (traditional, patriarchal) as the
essential basis for rearing & socialising
children into traditional gender roles
- Cohabitation and divorce rates create family
instability making it easier for adults to avoid
responsibility and commitment - negative effect on
children
- Benson
2006
- Found that 3000 of 15,000 childrens mothers had
become lone parents during the first 3 years of
their child's life
- Only 6% were married couples as opposed to 20% cohabiting
couples and 74% of these 'closely involved' but not living
together
- Charles Murray
- 1. The New Rabble - Long term unemployed, benefit
claimants, single mums etc ll serving to create a 'dependency
culture'
- Identified an 'underclass' in his native america and saw that one was
emerging in the UK, he saw 2 main groups:
- His solutions calls for an end to single parent benefits - he
sees this as being the answer to the welfare dependeny
- 2. The New Victorians - Middle Classists who marry, work hard,
pay taxes and raise their children 'properly'
- Owen Jones - says that 'chavs' are a
scapegoat to distact attention from
the real economic inequalities
- Marxism
- View the family within a framework of capitalist
society
- Believe the family serves the
pyramid scheme
- Role of the family
- Family reproduces unequal relationships
and works to 'clamp-down' inevitable social
conflict
- Nuclear families duty is concerned with
socialising its members to obey capitalism
- Disagrees with current system
- Women in the Family
- Engels - Views the monogamous nuclear
family as a way to pass on property rights
- Woman are 'Chattels'
(personal property)
- Engels is the earliest Marxist-Feminist, he basically says capitalism has
turned women into this. He says the family is only used to pass thing
down which remains within the bourgeoisie which should be shared.
Anmerkungen:
- Bourgeoisie - (in Marxist contexts) the capitalist class who own most of society's wealth and means of production.
- Wives position was
almost akin to a
prostitute - in
exchange for financial
security she provides
sex and heirs
Anmerkungen:
- Functions of the Family
- Reproduce the labour
force
- Socialising children to accept the
inequalities of capitalism
- Consume the goods
of capitalism
- Provide emotional support for
workers
- Engels
- In earliest societies he suggested there had
been no restrictions on sexual behaviour. As
societies became more complex more
restrictions were placed on sexuality .
- Argued that in the earliest societies
women held power, but as humans learned
to heard animals, men took control of the
livestock and thus became the first
property owners
- Argued that societies developed through
several stages / in an evolutionary
- First writers to apply
Marxism to family in 1884
- Didn't want to see family
abolished - he had weak evidence,
his ideas on evolution of families
evolution was criticised
- First Marxists to state families are shaped by
the economic system
- Zaretsky 1976
- Responsiblities of family life
stops workers from striking for a
better deal or leaving jobs
- Family ties the working class man
to his work as he need to work
hard to provide for his family
- Says that families serve capitalism by
- The family provides a
haven for alienated
workers
- Providing unpaid domestic labour of
housewives / creating a new
generation on workers
- Families consume the commodities of
capitalism
- Argues that the family is the
main prop to the capitalist
system
- In the working man's 'castle'
he can escape the the
fustrations of work
- Cooper
- Family makes you less
independently thinking and you
have to have the same views as
your family otherwise you wont
get along
- Sees the family and a ideological
conditioning institution
- Family forces you into believing you
are a worker not an owner
- Althusser 1971
- Argued that in order for capitalism to
survive the working class must submit to
the ruling class
- The ruling class cons us into
accepting their ideology, resulting
in false class consciousness
- He said that the family is part of the
Ideological State Apparatus, which controls
us by transmitting riling class ideology
- Feminist
- Believe that women have suffered prejudice and
discrimination simply because of their gender
- Think women need to feel free
from these injustices of patriarchy
and particularly the sphere of
family, home and work
- Feminism and
Patriarchy
- Feminism is a collection of movements and ideologies
aiming at defining, establishing and defending equal
political, economic, cultural and social rights for women
- Central to the feminist approach is the
idea of patriarchy or male dominance of
society
- It is argued that patriarchy is
established and reinforced in family
relationships
- Feminists argue that men benefit from families at
the expense of women because the family sustain
patriarchy
- Despite different feminist approaches they all
believe that women occupy a subordinate position
in the family and are exploited
- Marxist
Feminist
- Women are seen as cheap and exploitable in the
labour market where constraints of childcare keep
them concentrated
- Advocate the overthrow of capitalism as
being necessary to free men and women
from a position of slavery
- Women provide male workers with food, drink
and relaxation, enabling them to go back to work
refreshed
- 'Reserve army labour' to be called
upon when needed
- Liberal
Feminists
- Advocate change through legislation
and education
- Equal Pay Act 1970 / Sex and
Discrimination Act 1975 / Equality Act
2010
- Equality in maternity and paternity
leave from 2015
- Believe that neither sexes benefit from
the gender inequalities in society
- Believe things are slowly getting better
- Radical Feminists
- Family is a site of domestic violence
- Believe patriarchy is the source of all
our discontents in society
- Women must fight for
their rights
- Men exploit women as husbands,
brothers, sons etc
- Family Ideology is forced upon people
- Greer 2007 - argues that the family is
an exploitive institution
- Some advocate separatism or
political lesbianism
- 'Family' excludes those who persue
different lifestyles
- Difference Feminists
- Feel that other feminist 'flavours' have
ignoored the differences that exist between
men and women
- Many varies cultural and religious
issues faced by women of colour
- eg Why do African-Carribean women have such high
rate of single parenting?
- Postmodern