Families And Households:Theories of the Family Flashcards
(47 cards)
Murdock (1949)
Proposed the concept of the universal functions of families. These are the sexual function, the reproductive function, the educational function and the economic function.
Parsons (1959)
Suggests there are two basic functions to the family. Function 1 is the primary socialisation of children.
Function 2 is the warm bath theory.
Define the warm bath theory
The mother creates a loving and nurturing environment which allows the family adults to relax and release tensions created in the outside world.
Define the functional fit theory
The family adapts itself to meet the needs of society. According to Parsons, the nuclear family is the best type of family to meet the needs of an industrial society. In pre-industrial society, the family structure was dominated by the extended family. The family moved away from being a unit of production and became a unit of consumption.
Define Geographically Mobile Workforce
Because industries constantly spring up and decline, families need to be nuclear so they can easily move than moving multi-generational families
Define Socially Mobile Workforce
In industrial society, people are rewarded with promotions. The nuclear family reduces tensions as a child who might have a higher achieved status than its parents don’t live in the same house.
Define Loss of Functions
In pre-industrial societies families were a unit of production and consumption. In industrial societies, they are a unit of consumption. The education system and NHS was introduced allowing the family to specialise.
Define Industrialisation
The process by which the economy transformed from primarily agricultural to one based on manufacturing of good. Individual labour is replaced by mechanised mass production.
Fletcher (1966)
The traditional functions such as the care and education of children have been supported rather than removed by the welfare state through state schools, hospitals and welfare provisions. He claims that people get divorced as they expect and demand more from marriage and are less likely to put up with an unhappy marriage.
List strengths to Murdock’s research
Provides an insight of the families importance to society by examining how a family functions in society.
Studies 250 different societies which is a fairly good representation of families all over the world.
List weaknesses to Murdock’s research
Feminist sociologists argue that saying the family is essential is ideological because traditional family structures disadvantage some women.
Some cultures don’t appear to have families.
Other institutions in society can perform the functions.
List strengths to Parsons research
Identifies how families can change and adapt to meet society’s needs so a more stable society is created.
List weaknesses to Parsons research
Social change doesn’t happen in such an orderly manner.
Evidence to suggest the family was already nuclear before industrialisation.
Downplays conflict in the family e.g. domestic violence.
Views on instrumental and expressive roles are old fashioned.
Too deterministic.
List strengths to Fletcher’s research
March of progress with social policies.
List weaknesses to Fletcher’s research
Assumes that all members of the family benefit equally from social policies.
Feminists argue that policies often benefit men more than women.
Define The New Right Perspective on the Family
The main reasons behind society’s problems are single parent families and families that fall outside of the normal nuclear family.
Not in favour of the welfare state or universal benefits.
Not in favour of single mothers arguing that them not working will have a negative impact on a child.
Increase in lone parent and reconstituted families will lead to a breakdown of traditional values.
Traditional nuclear family seen as ideal type.
Almond (2008)
Government policies have resulted in fragmenting families by undermining the nuclear family whilst promoting the growth of other family types through:
Divorce reform laws
Civil partnerships
Tax allowances
Murray (1989)
Welfare state has created a culture of dependency where people are reliant on the welfare state.
Single parents are the most important social problem of our time.
The Underclass
List three weaknesses to Almond and Murray’s ideas
Do not look at the origin of the problem which often comes from low wages, inadequate state benefits and unemployment, instead blaming the victims.
Ignores family diversity and the dark side of the family as they place emphasis on the nuclear family, whilst considering any other family type as inferior.
Would like us to return to the Victorian times where the traditional family was dominant, but family diversity was a problem even then.
Engels (1884)
Society has evolved from communism to capitalism where the accumulation of wealth and property becomes integral to society.
Marriage is based on monogamy which is where the nuclear family developed.
Ownership of private property at the heart of capitalism and the main concern of males was to make sure that wealth would be passed down their bloodline.
Bourgeois nuclear family oppressed women because:
Females primary role is to reproduce
Females economically dependent on husbands.
Althusser (1971)
The working class must submit to the ruling class. Family passes on the ideology of the ruling class. This happens through primary socialisation.
Zaretsky (1976)
Family in capitalist society creates an illusion that the private life of family is separate from the economy. Home is a refuge away from the stresses of working life.
Home life and work life are inseparable as the wages earned at work are spent on commodities that people are convinced they need through advertising.
Family cushions the effects of capitalism through love and support but fails to do this successfully.
List 5 weaknesses to the Marxist Approach
1) Too deterministic arguing that they overemphasise the importance that the economic system has on the family. (Althusser)
2) Overly negative views (Zaretsky)
3) Ideas considered dated given the changes in within the family and the alternative family types. (Engels)
4) Ignores the fact that individuals have a responsibility.
5) Feminists argue they ignore the plight of women and have failed to highlight the importance of patriarchy.
Benson (1972)
The unpaid labour that the woman does in the home helps to support capitalism. Male becomes bound to wage labour which weakens the bargaining power he has to ensure better working conditions for himself.