Contemporary families and relationships: reinventing responsibility
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
New York u.a.
McGraw-Hill
1995
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Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XVIII, 474 S. Ill. |
ISBN: | 0070551332 |
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adam_text | CONTENTS IN BRIEF
Preface xv 7. FROM THE MODERN FAMILY
TO THE INVENTION OF POST¬
MODERN FAMILIES—THE
ONE 192Qs THROUGH THE 1960s 119
CENTRAL IDEAS
PART THREE
1. INTRODUCTION: WHAT THIS BOOK IS ABOUT 3 EXAMPLES OF TODAY S
2. FAMILIES WE CHOOSE 15 REINVENTIONS
3. FAMILIES WE RE BORN WITH 31 4. SOME CONTEMPORARY 8. SOME QUESTIONS ABOUT
SEXUAL SCENES 49 SINGLENESS 149
5. INVENTING EROTIC 9. COHABITATION THE
FRIENDSHIPS 69 SPREAD OF INFORMAL
MARRIAGES 167
part two 10 EXPLORING FORMAL MAR¬
RIAGES AND REMARRIAGES 191
HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES n CQNÂ¥UCJ NEGOTIATION,
AND PROBLEM SOLVING 219
6. EARLIER FAMILIES: FROM THE 12. AGGRESSION AGAINST
1700s TO THE 1920s 99 WOMEN 249
vii
13. DIVORCE AND ITS RESPONSI partfour
BILITIES 281
14. AGING, THE FAMILY LIFE THE QUEST
CYCLE, AND LIFE COURSES 311 FOR RESPONSIBILITY
15. THE RESPONSIBILITIES
OF PAID WORK AND 18. PUBLIC POLICIES FOR
HOMEWORK 337 FAMILIES 415
16. RESPONSIBLE BIRTHING
AND PARENTING 367
Bibliography 427
17. THE SEXUAL AND PHYSICAL Photo Credits 451
ABUSE OF CHILDREN 395 Indexes 453
I
i
i
CONTENTS
Preface xv Social Families in a Women s Prison 17
African Americans and Social Families 19
Comparisons with the Benchmark Nuclear
FART ONE Family 22
Comparisons with Support Networks and
CENTRAL IDEAS Friendships 22
— Redefining Families 22
1. INTRODUCTION: WHAT THIS USS^ S^J Family Begin? ll
BOOK IS ABOUT 3 When Does Being in Family Cease? 27
A Great Debate 3 Conclusion—Social Families and
The Debate throughout Recent Social Responsibility 29
History 5 Notes 29
Old Action Theory—Preserving the
Family 6
New Action Theory—Reinventing 3. FAMILIES WE RE BORN WITH 31
Families 8 The Importance of Blood Ties 31
Plan of the Book 9 Formal Families 32
Diversities among Families 11 The Constraints of Formal Families 33
. , , , ,_, ., ,_ ... ,„ Constructing Family Boundaries 34
Methods of Research about Families 13 y
Social Conditions, Families, and
Notes M Friends 35
Being Just Friends 36
2. FAMILIES WE CHOOSE 15 The Bottom Line—Services, Goods, and
Defining Families 16 Money 36
Social Families in a Women s Factory 16 Friends Reinventing Families 37
ix
Moral Obligations 39 We ness as a Social Bond 70
Parents as Front Line 40 Helga s Life Course 73
Families, Obligations, and Histories 43 Decline of We ness 74
Limiting Obligations to Children 44 The Phases of Erotic Friendships 75
Neglect and Abuse 44 The Formation Phase—Assessing Prospects 75
Distribution of Tangible Benefits 44 The Maintenance and Change Phase—Cul
Lone Parents and Obligations to Children 46 tivating a Partnership 80
Conclusion—Social Families and the The Dissolution Phase—The Winding
Twenty First Century 46 Down of We ness 87
Notes 47 Conclusion—Reinventing Respon¬
sible Sexual Dyads 92
4. SOME CONTEMPORARY
SEXUAL SCENES 49
Sexual Norms and Beliefs 49
The First Kinsey Reports 49 PART TWO
A Later Kinsey Institute Report 50 Explaining Views on Sexuality 52 FfTSTOTCTCAT
Trends in Sexual Behaviors among PFRSPFCTTVFS
Adolescents and Youth 54
Sexual Behaviors among Adolescents 55
Sexual Behaviors among Persons in Their EARLIER FAMILIES_FROM
Txventies 58 THE 1700s TO THE 1920s 99
A Sexual Revolution? 58
Rexvording the Question 58 The Ties That Bind 99
Extramarital Intercourse—Norms and Colonial Experiences—The 1700s 100
Behaviors 59 Patriarchy and Intimacy 101
Explaining Disapproval of EMC 61 Equality and Intimacy 102
Co marital Sex: Swinging 61 Children and Childrearing 103
Homosexualities 62 Jacksonian America—The Early 1800s 104
Explaining Homosexuality 62 Industrialization and the Gospel of Success 104
Defining Homosexuality 63 Separate but Equal 104
Biscxualitu 64 New Views on Gender and Friendship 105
Comparing Gay and Straight Couples and The Emergence of Feminism 107
parents 64 Sex without Passion 107
Spectrum of Sexualities 65 Children and Childrearing 109
Coming out and Affirming Responsibility 66 The Progressive Era—1860s to the
Political Struggles over Sexuality 66 1920s 109
„ . . c n . T, The Ideal Man 110
Conclusion—Sexuality in lhree . . in
3 Organized Sports 110
° New Choices for Women 111
Notes 68 The Roaring Twenties 112
5. INVENTING EROTIC FRIEND Conclusion—Balancing Me ness
SHIPS 69 with We ness 115
Helga s Story 70 Notes 117
7. FROM THE MODERN FAMILY Trends in Attitudes towards Sin
TO THE INVENTION OF POST gleness 151
MODERN FAMILIES THE Defining Singleness 152
1920s THROUGH THE 1960S 119 Trends among Never Married Persons 152
Inventing the Dating Game 119 Age at First Marriage 152
I Women s Dilemma 121 Racial and Ethnic Patterns 154
| Eligible Players 121 Cross National Patterns 154
1 Passion without Intercourse 121 Trends among Divorced Persons 154
I Measuring the Line 122 Singles within the Total Population 155
I Sexual Bargaining 123 Living Arrangements 156
! The Place of Love 124 Four Outlooks on Singleness 159
I Dating Concluded and Virginity Voluntary and Resolved 159
Relinquished 125 Voluntary and Ambivalent 159
i The Kinsey Reports 126 Involuntary Wishfuls 160
The Great Depression and Sex during Involuntary Regretfuls 160
Engagement 126 Singleness among Educated African
After the Game—The Modern Family 127 Americans 160
Managing Men 127 Unsettled Questions 161
Sexuality and Contraception for Married Well Being,loneliness,and Suicide 161
Couples 128 , , .
r „„ Freedom ana Belonging 161
Gender In(Eauahty) 129 ^ ^J* ^
World War II and Modern Marriage 132
Postwar Family Togetherness 132 Conclusion Being Single and Re
1950s Adolescents and the Dating Game 133 sponsible 165
Children and Child Rearing 134 Notes 165
Inventing Postmodern Families 135 rnHARTTATTOM THFSPBFAn
Social Movements of the 1960s 136 9 ^^^MA^A^lflAr A «,
The Big Change Women s Employment OF INFORMAL MARRIAGES 167
Revolution 142 Domestic Partnership Ordinances 167
Conclusion Describing Postmodern Religious Reactions to DP Codes 168
Lives and Families 144 Informal Marriages and Social Families 169
Cohabitation versus Marriage 170
Notes 145 6 f
Prevalence of and Duration of
Cohabitation 172
PART THREE Nonpermanence 172
cv a iv tot cc r»c mn a vc Cohabitation and the Instability
EXAMPLES OF TODAY S of Marriages 174
REINVENTIONS The Corrosive Effects of Time 175
Unconventionality and Pressures to Marry 176
Trends among Younger Persons 177
8. SOME QUESTIONS ABOUT The Economics of Cohabitation 178
SINGLENESS 149 Long Term Cohabitations
Discrimination against Singles 149 Unconventional 178
Singleness as Deviant 150 Cohabitation and Marriage Rates 179
Comparing Informal Marriages 11. CONFLICT, NEGOTIATION,
with Other Relationships 179 AND PROBLEM SOLVING 219
Physical Aggression among Nonmarrieds 182 Unhappily Ever After 219
Inventing Customs and Laws 182 Love and Conflict 220
Common Law Marriages 183 Struggles between the Genders 221
Erosion of Legal Marriage 184 Conflict The Normal Thing 222
Conclusion—Informal yet Respon Conflict and the Quest for Equality 224
sible 187 Nonnegotiable Matters 227
Notes 188 Impacts on the Broader Social Fabric 229
Joint Decision Making 230
10. EXPLORING FORMAL The Social Context of Joint
MARRIAGES Decision Making 231
AND REMARRIAGES 191 The Social Processes of ]oint
What s Real? 192 Decision Making 232
The Invention of Formal Marriages 193 The Outcomes of Joint
Wives as Property 193 Decision Making 237
Patriarchal Norms 194 Dialectic Tension 237
The Struggle to Make Life Better 194 The Emergence of a Conflict Mode 238
Injustices and Excesses 195 Negotiations 239
The Case in Japan 196 Other Factors That Affect
Marriage and the Pressure to Parent 200 Decision Making 241
Thou Shalt Lave Thy Neighbor as Economic Autonomy 242
Thyself 201 *««* ^42
Rapoport s Dilemma 202 Autonomy, Power, and Well Bang 243
Types of Marriage Reinventions 205 Conclusion Decision Making
„ , r , ,,. . _nc and the Quest for Responsibility 245
Head Complement Marriages 205 r J
Senior and Junior Partners 205 Notes 246
Equal Partners 207 12. AGGRESSION AGAINST
Other Reinventions Surrounding WOMEN 249
Marriage 209 Sexual Exploitation 249
Married Women s Name Change 209 Economic Autonomy Availability 251
Weddings as Rituals 211 Defining Rape and Sexual Assault 252
Postponing the First Formal Marriage 212 Sexual Assault among Acquaintances 252
Disinventing Teenage Marriages 212 How widespread Is Acquaintance Rape? 253
Remarriages 213 The Issue of the Woman s Consent 253
Divorce among Remarriages 214 Rape Myths 256
Declines in Remarriage Rates 214 Negotiation and Rape 257
Cohabitation among the Divorced 214 Effective Negotiation 258
Declines in Total Numbers of Years Sexual Harrassment 263
Formalin Married 215 TT , c ~ ~,.
y Harrassment from Superiors 264
Conclusion 215 Harrassment from Peers 265
Notes 216 Explaining Harrassment 267
Physical Force 267 14. AGING, THE FAMILY LIFE
The Social Acceptability of Physical Force 268 CYCLE, AND LIFE COURSES 311
Physical Force within Primary Groups 269 Control and Responsibility 312
Gender and Physical Force 273 j .i n ir r^i , ,
J „,, Aging and the Family Life Cycle 313
Woman Abuse 273 ° b J
Role Conformity and the Life Cycle
Woman Abuse around the World 277 Approach 314
Conclusion—The Irresponsibility Aging and Life Courses 317
of Aggression 278 Transitions 317
Notes 279 Childhood, Adolescence, and Control 320
Gay and Lesbian Adolescents 321
Economic Support and Parental Control 322
13. DIVORCE AND ITS Aging into Young Adulthood 322
RESPONSIBILITIES 281 Structural Changes 323
Social Categories and the Likelihood Comparing 1960 with 1980—Complexity
of Divorce 283 and Diversity 326
Economic Disadvantages and Families 284 Aging into the Middle Years 327
Divorce and Children 287 Settling Down 327
Feminization of Poverty 290 Rediscovery of Choice 328
The Shame of Divorce 293 The Reaffirmation of Choice 329
Adultery and Divorce 293 Aging into the Later Years 330
The Fault Concept 294 Sliding Dmvnhill versus the New Aging 331
The Divorce Revolution 296 Choice versus Coping 332
Legal Innovations 296 Bottom Line Obligations 333
From Marital Permanence Conclusion—The Obligation
to Permanent Availability 297 of Lifelong Reinvention 334
From Constraint to Choice 298 Notes 335
Availability and Control 298
TT , T ,. r 15. THE RESPONSIBILITIES
Unforeseen.NegativeConsequences OF PAID WORK AND
of Divorce Reform 299 HOMEWORK 337
Midlifc Women and Changes m the
RUlCf 300 The Dream: (1) Women s Educational
„ , . . r, £ m Achievements 338
Reforming the Reforms 301
_. a a ¦ »t At •• ic The Dream: (2) Women s Labor Force
Divorce—An American Tradition 302
„. ,., ., » ,,n Experiences 340
Divorce as Failure • ¦ ,r
, . , „ , , ,,,, uuemvloi/meiit 340
Family Disorganization and Breakdoicn 303 ¦
.._ ... ¦,, .. Differences in Earnings 341
Termination and Transition 3114
Economic Well hem^ .i4.
The Declining Significance of
„. ,n Accounting for Differences in
Divorce 30d . b
Earnings 344
The Hassles of Getting Out 306 Structural Sexhm 344
Conclusion 307 Socialization into Traditional Gender Roles 34c
jsjQj gg 308 Children and Women s Paid Labor 348
•A.J.C Men and the Workings of the House Physical Abuse 401
hold 353 Rates of Violence toward Children 402
Facts about Housework 354 Social Factors Associated with Physical
Piecing Together the Puzzle 356 Abuse 405
Home Work and Labor Force Options 359 Personal Control and Physical Abuse 406
Tough Choices 360 Violence by Children 407
Naive Expectations 362 Cradles of Violence 407
Conclusion 364 A Radical Suggestion 408
XT . „,_ Empowering Children via the
Notes 365 F .f
Community 409
16. RESPONSIBLE BIRTHING Conclusion 410
AND PARENTING 367
Notes 410
Pronatalism 368
Women s Employment and Children 368
r,.,, „ . ... .. , PART FOUR
Child Free—An Alternative to ; Hrv,H , 3?1 THE QUEST
S3SSS?â„¢4 373 FOR RESPONSIBILITY
Adolescent Childbearing 374
Images of Unwed Mothers 375 ^ PUBLIC POLICIES FOR
The Social Context of Adolescent Child v. TT T_c
bearing 376
*j ,tni • jt L ^r,r, A Vision of the Modern Family 415
Adult Choices and Transitions 377 J
Solo Mothers 378 A Contemporary Vision 416
Blended Families 379 The Concept of Family 416
Solo Fathers 381 The Broader Social Structure 417
Homosexual Parents 382 Themes about Contemporary
Children s Coping, Control, and Well being 383 Families 418
Physical Punishment and Children s Women s Autonomy 418
Autonomy 387 Beyond Blood Ties and beyond the
Sensible Spankings 388 Household 419
Force, Autonomy, and Children s Best Informal Marriages 422
Interests 390 Struggling over Policies and
The Big Picture 391 Programs 423
Conclusion 391 Notes 425
Notes 392
Bibliography 427
17. THE SEXUAL AND PHYSICAL
ABUSE OF CHILDREN 395 Photo Credits 451
Sexual Abuse 395 Indexes
Types of Child Sexual Coercion 396 XT T , ._„
yv , „„„ Name Index 453
Sexual Coercion by Adolescents 398
Prosecuting Child Sexual Abuse 399 Subject Index 463
|
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spelling | Scanzoni, John Verfasser aut Contemporary families and relationships reinventing responsibility John Scanzoni New York u.a. McGraw-Hill 1995 XVIII, 474 S. Ill. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Famille - États-Unis Gezin gtt Mariage - États-Unis Families United States Marriage United States Eheschließung (DE-588)4013657-7 gnd rswk-swf Familie (DE-588)4016397-0 gnd rswk-swf USA USA (DE-588)4078704-7 gnd rswk-swf USA (DE-588)4078704-7 g Familie (DE-588)4016397-0 s DE-604 Eheschließung (DE-588)4013657-7 s HBZ Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=006988887&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Scanzoni, John Contemporary families and relationships reinventing responsibility Famille - États-Unis Gezin gtt Mariage - États-Unis Families United States Marriage United States Eheschließung (DE-588)4013657-7 gnd Familie (DE-588)4016397-0 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4013657-7 (DE-588)4016397-0 (DE-588)4078704-7 |
title | Contemporary families and relationships reinventing responsibility |
title_auth | Contemporary families and relationships reinventing responsibility |
title_exact_search | Contemporary families and relationships reinventing responsibility |
title_full | Contemporary families and relationships reinventing responsibility John Scanzoni |
title_fullStr | Contemporary families and relationships reinventing responsibility John Scanzoni |
title_full_unstemmed | Contemporary families and relationships reinventing responsibility John Scanzoni |
title_short | Contemporary families and relationships |
title_sort | contemporary families and relationships reinventing responsibility |
title_sub | reinventing responsibility |
topic | Famille - États-Unis Gezin gtt Mariage - États-Unis Families United States Marriage United States Eheschließung (DE-588)4013657-7 gnd Familie (DE-588)4016397-0 gnd |
topic_facet | Famille - États-Unis Gezin Mariage - États-Unis Families United States Marriage United States Eheschließung Familie USA |
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