Wednesday, March 13, 2019
To what extent do Contemporary Sociologists see the Modern Family as a Haven from the Outside World?
Until recently, sociological studies of the family have concentrated upon the  portion of the family inside bon ton. Contemporary sociologists however have shown an increasing interest in the emotional relationships  at heart the family unit. This is an important issue in sociology when looking at the role of the family, as the family is the only institution in  corporation providing  bosom and emotional support. There is no  new(prenominal) specialised unit that does this. near sociological perspectives  mickle the family as a  haven, compensating individuals for the harsh, cruel and potentially psychologically damaging  veracity of the  egressside world. The view that the family is a haven is  in the first  prescribe from a functionalist perspective.  Marxists agree to a lesser extent whilst feminists certainly  correct such(prenominal) views. There   ar traditional views on the family like that of Talcott Parsons, and critics of this view who view the family as a prison, such as M   organ, and feminist Anne Oakley. by chance the most famous theory of the family is the view held by functionalist sociologist Talcott Parsons. He argues that the family performs  both roles, the primary socialisation of children, and the stabilisation of  large(p) personalities  thus agreeing with the idea that the family is a haven from the outside world. He states that  muckle have an inborn  hold to be loved and cared for and now traditional communities and kinship net urinates of the early twentieth Century have given way to isolated nuclear families, people are more dependent on the emotional support within that family unit.Other functionalists support this view. Goode, for example, saw the family as  existence a place where a person could be treated as an individual compensating for the stresses of a non-personal modern society. Fletcher argued that a conjugal family was important as it depended upon emotional factors such as intimacy, closeness and intensity. Although the mar   riage rate is descending, the number of people choosing alternatively to cohabitate has increased. Few Marxists view the family as  world a haven. Those that do,  lay down a similar argu workforcet to functionalists.Hunt and Hunt, in their study panacea for capitalist economy constructed the argument that love, and family, provides a panacea, a cure-all, for the harsh realities of a capitalist society. The family, being an institution that changes in response to other sections of society, would change with the development of capitalism,  hence the family becomes more important to its members as capitalism develops. Dorothy Smith, also a Marxist views the family as a haven in which to be free from surveillance, a place to organise our own lives without having to follow rules laid down by some whiz else.Marxists who view the family as a haven argue that this is a challenge to capitalist society. The family is also viewed as a prison. Functionalist sociologist Morgan concentrated upon    the dysfunctions of the family and  form that two factors prevented the family from being a haven Class differences within society means those who are well off can enjoy and  find out full advantage of what society has to offer. Those further down the social  shell often find society opposing their interests. Life ends up as a struggle, which in  change by reversal leads to stresses and strains within the family.Morgan also argued that even within the family inequalities exist. Family members have their own interests and aspirations. For whom is the family functional?  asks Morgan. It is usually the male head of the  star sign who is well served by the functions of the family. Marxists also state that the family should not have to be seen as a haven from a capitalist society, that capitalism takes creative thinking and affection out of society, and steals away opportunities for personal growth. Barrett and McIntosh studied this in their work The Anti-social family.They developed the    concept of familialism, the ideology that the family is a small, isolated, conjugal unit where the  keep up is the breadwinner, the wife a  domestic help goddess and the children as happy, smiley and well behaved. What advertisers term the cornflake family has been  commit upon a pedestal and advocated as the normal and proper way to live. Barrett and McIntosh argued that this could make the family a prison in that any member who does not  apparel in will be repressed, and that individual can in turn become psychologically damaged.Likewise, families who do not fit this ideology are seen as deviant and troublesome.  feminism tends to oppose the view of the family as a haven, choosing instead to see the family as a prison. The family is where women are oppressed and repressed.  indoors the family the woman is seen primarily as the housewife and mother, and in this  purlieu men are given the control over womens sexuality and fertility. Within the family,  gender roles are taught at a    very young age and this spills out into society as a whole, reinforcing gender inequalities.According to feminists, the family is where women are  put under the threat of physical and mental abuse. Anne Oakley conducted a study, The Housewife and Housework. She views the family as a prison because of the nature of housework and its lack of status. Housework is monotonous, crying and relentless. Its a job that goes un-rewarded,  pro bono, unseen and unappreciated. Men are able to  head for the hills this routine, and children are able to escape also. Domestic labour is seen throughout society as the feminine role. Leonard looks more at the ideology of the family and how women are  socialized to accept their role.Womens magazines and television programmes are all geared towards romance and domestic issues like cooking. Leonard argues that the family is a prison and completely unequal in that the  conserve offers the minimum level of support to his wife and children whilst she provides    a lifetime of unpaid housework, years of child rearing and exclusive sexual services. Marriage therefore does not turn out anything like the romance promoted by the media. Feminism has helped highlight many issues facing women within society, but perhaps one of the biggest issues feminists have highlighted is that domestic abuse and violence.This puts more emphasis on the family being a prison because those people living within this environment are far from the safety of a haven. There has been much difficulty in researching this because many women are too afraid to speak out. In conclusion, to a large extent, functionalists view the family as a haven because it provides stabilisation of adult personalities in order to cope with day-to-day life. However, if a family is dysfunctional  therefore this can make the family a prison.Marxists do not see why the family should be seen as a haven, but agrees that the family is a panacea from a capitalist society, and at best a challenge to c   apitalism. Feminists on the other hand do not view the family as a haven in any way. They see the family as a place in which there are inequalities that cause the oppression of women. Indeed the family is also an environment that can be far from safe, where women, and children are at risk from abuse. Sociologists do recognise that families do vary and what may be seen as a haven by some may be far from the reality for others.  
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.