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INTIMACY & COMMITMENT. The Canadian Family Dynamic Instructor: Gail McCabe PhD RSSW Thursday, June 5, 2008. Intimacy & Commitment. Intimacy : closely acquainted or associated; very familiar on a fundamental or essential level
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INTIMACY &COMMITMENT The Canadian Family Dynamic Instructor: Gail McCabe PhD RSSW Thursday, June 5, 2008
Intimacy & Commitment • Intimacy: closely acquainted or associated; very familiar on a fundamental or essential level • Commitment: dedication to a long-term course of action; engagement; involvement
Establishing Intimacy • Homogamy (likeness or similarities of individuals) • Endogamy (within groups) • Exogamy (outside groups)
Establishing Intimacy • Social or Structural Characteristics • Social Status (123) • Arranged Marriage vs. Free Choice • Individualistic Explanations • Sociocultural Explanations • Sexualization and Sexual Scripts
Social Status • Class endogamy • Occupational endogamy • Educational endogamy • Mesalliance: marriage with a person of a lower social position • Hypergamy: female marries into a higher social class • Hypogamy: female marries into a lower social class
The “Marriage Squeeze” • Imbalance in the sex ratio (# of males and females available for marriage) if there is a shortage • 1950s; men faced a shortage of women • 1980s-90s, shortage of men and is predicted that there will be a shortage of women
Race and Ethnicity • Inter-racial marriage restricted in US until 1967 • Women tend to marry within their group • Immigrants from China, India and Japan have higher tendency to marry people from native country than those from Greece, Italy, Africa or France
Arranged Marriage vs. Free Choice • Arranged marriages preserve family property, furthers political linkages, protects economic and status concerns, continuity and stability • Based on dowry or size of bride’s price, reputation of potential spouse’s kin group
Social Construction of Love • At first sight? Fell in it? Made it? Have it? Would like to find it? • What is it? Dictionary: “intense affection for another based on shared experiences or interests, and an intense attraction to another person based largely on sexual desire”
Individualistic Explanations of Partnering • Instinctive and Biological Theory • Parental Image Theory-Freud • Complimentary Needs Theory- Winch
1. Instinct and Biological Theory • What guides people to each other is instinct • Based on genetic similarities
Parental Image Theory-Freud • Tend to fall in love with a person similar to opposite sex parent (so unconscious?) • Oedipus Complex: mother is object of love • Electra Complex • See p. 133
Complimentary Needs TheoryRobert Winch • Mate selection complimentary rather than homogamous • Psychological needs and individual motivation
Sociocultural Explanations of Partnering • Influenced by age, race, religion, class, proximity • Value Theory • Role Theory • Exchange Theory • Sequential Theories
Value Theory • Sharing similar values: what is good, worthwhile, moral • When people share similar values, they validate each other promoting emotional satisfaction and enhances the means of communication • If couples do not hold the same values or are attacked, resentment may result • P. 135
Role Theory • Expectations of their own behaviour and that of their mates • Would you marry someone who you expect to do _________ rather than someone who does not?
Exchange Theory • Bargaining and transactions in mate selection • Behaviour is purposive and goal oriented • Goal is to get something positive out of it • Presented with alternative to current relationship that is perceived as superior/better may see termination of current relationship in pursuit of the better one
Sequential Theories Murstein’s Stimulus-Value-Role 1. Stimulus drawn to another (attractiveness, intellect, voice), if mutual 2. Value comparison value compatibility thru verbal interaction ( i.e attitudes towards life) if couple believes they share values, they will be attracted to each other (an attractive choice) 3. Role stage must share role definitions as well as values (lover, parent)
Sequential Theories Bert Adams Mate selection priorities: 1.Conditions or barriers, proximity 2. Early attractions: physical qualities, similar interest 3. Deeper attractions: personality similarity 4. Defining the other as “the one” or the “best I can get”
Dating • Dating came about because marriage became based on love and sexual attraction • Dating is opportunity to know what is expected of self and others • Computer match-ups, videotape selections, singles clubs and groups, newspaper ads, singles bars
Dating cont. • Dating came about because marriage became based on love and sexual attraction • Dating is opportunity to know what is expected of self and others • Computer match-ups, videotape selections, singles clubs and groups, newspaper ads, singles bars
Engagement • Exists in some form in all societies • Marriage is seldom taken lightly, societies provide social structure or instill awareness in the couple and community that the relationship is to be taken seriously
Sexuality and Intimacy • Sexual expression is regulated and controlled through social norms, roles • Expectations differ for males and females, in public and private places, for married and singles etc • Laws punish the prostitute, distributor of child pornography or the rapist • All societies control sexuality
Sexualization and Sexual Scripts • Sexualization – sexual socialization • process by which people learn and internalize their sexual self-concepts, values, attitudes, behaviors • Symbolic interaction theory claims that people become sexual beings trough social interaction • Sexual Scripts/Cultural Scripts • Blueprint of what sexuality is and how it is practiced: who, what when, where, why of sexuality • Scripts are the plans that we have in our heads • An script is a cognitive scheme that affects his or hers actual conduct
According to Simon and Gagnon sexual scripting occurs on three levels: • Cultural scenarios • Interpersonal scripts • Intrapsychic • Sexual life cycles tend to be subsumed under headings of premarital, marital, extra-marital and post marital experiences
Statistics • 1970: 57% of Canadians surveyed thought pre-marital sex was wrong • 1991: 22% felt this way • 1980s: AIDs and awareness raising appears; High risk behaviors • Sexual permissiveness, incidence and prevalence • Sexual revolution was real but restricted to premarital and heterosexual behavior
Establishing Commitment • Marriage as a social institution • Canadian Marriage and Cohabitation Trends • Non-marital cohabitation • Cohabitation and marital stability • Variations in marriage rates • Power in Conjugal Relationships • Characteristics of conjugal power • Conjugal power and decision making in intimate relationships • Theory of resources • Egalitarian ethic • Marital Quality • Dimensions of marital or relationship quality • Marital conflict • Marital quality between generations • Marital quality over the lifecourse
Marital Status and Well Being • Married men and women are: • happier and less stressed • less emotional and health problems than unmarried men and women • more likely to abstain from smoking, drink moderately, avoid risk-taking behaviour • live longer
Marital Status and Well Being • Married women have more economic resources “safety net” • Men receive more emotional support in marriage
Canadian Marriage & Cohabitation Trends • Fewer the # of women to men, higher the # who marry and at a younger age • Marriage rates dropped during the Great Depression, rose during and after the WWII and declined again over the last two decades
Factors Contributing to Decline and Delays in Marriage • Increase in nonmarital sexual activity • Increase in the independence of young people • A reduction in fertility • Temporary shortage of males • Increase in divorce • Increase in nonmarital cohabitation
Cohabitation • More common in Quebec • Among older couples with children (unlike rest of Canada) • See p. 158 figure 6.1 • Couples who cohabited before marriage reported lower quality marriages, lower commitment to the institution of marriage • More individualistic views of marriage and greater likelihood of divorce
Egalitarian Ethic • Husbands who were more progressive (less traditional) were found to show increases in marital quality • Wives who held non traditional gender role attitudes reported increases in negative aspects of the marriage (less happiness, more disagreements )
Marital Quality • Social attachment is more important and a better predictor of well-being than legal status of being married • Catherine Ross- 4 levels of marital status: no partner, partner outside of the household, living with a partner and married partner • Marital quality is essentially a relative agreement by partners on what issues are important, sharing similar tasks and activities and demonstration of affection • Newlyweds study: happiness, equity, competence and control • Conflict is natural and inevitable therefore the quality of marriage is not based on whether the conflict exists, but on how the conflict is measured
Evaluating Marital Quality • Begins in the 1920s • Dyadic Adjustment Scale by Graham Spanier (32 items) • Satisfaction: Do you confide in your mate? Are you happy? • Cohesion: Exchange ideas and do things together? • Consensus: Agreement on finances, religion, friends, household tasks • Showing love and affection • Susan Hendriks developed a seven-item relationship assessment scale
Marital Alternatives • Jessie Bernard: Marriage can be successful to the extent that it provides the highest satisfaction possible, not imaginable • Costs and rewards • How much better or worse they would be without their present spouse and how easily that spouse could be replaced • 7% of intact marriages are stable but unhappy
Marital Quality Over the Life Course • U shaped pattern • Marital satisfaction high at beginning • Declines when children born • Marital satisfaction increases when children leave home and remains high through retirement
What Keeps Long Term Marriages Going? • Survey of 100 couples married 45+years • Mate is best friend • Like mate as a person • See marriage as a long term (sacred) commitment • Agree on aims and goals • Laugh together frequently
Survey Findings (1992) • 94% faithfulness is most important factor for a successful marriage • 63% happy sexual relationship • 53% sharing chores • 46% living away from in-laws Marital quality, regardless of how it’s measured, is remarkably stable phenomenon, unaffected by gender or marital duration