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Gender and Intimate Relationships

Gender and Intimate Relationships. Gender and Relationships. What is meant by an intimate relationship Usually family What else? How much difference is there between home and the rest of the world? Is home really private Is work and the rest of the world really public

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Gender and Intimate Relationships

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  1. Gender and Intimate Relationships

  2. Gender and Relationships • What is meant by an intimate relationship • Usually family • What else? • How much difference is there between home and the rest of the world? • Is home really private • Is work and the rest of the world really public • How do the 2 worlds interact?

  3. Sociology and the Family • Despite what the text says, the nuclear family is a recent development • The nuclear family is very different from the extended family/clan • We will focus on the contemporary family • Especially after the industrial revolution • And with some post industrial commentary

  4. Sociology and the Family • Parsons and the structural-functionalist brought their perspective to the family • They looked at what they saw in the family and argued that because it was there it was needed • Saw two major categories of what any family needed • Instrumental- leadership and decision making • Expressive- emotional support • Housework IS instrumental

  5. Sociology and the Family • Historically, short life spans limited the extended family to only a few generations • Role differentiation makes instrumental and expressive mutually exclusive and seemingly linked to biological sex • Is this necessary • Is this true today? • If not what is the family like today • Are there options other than nuclear or extended families?

  6. Contemporary Family Structures • Nuclear and extended still are the most common structures • There has been an increase in the percent of families with no children • There has been an increase in the percent of families with two earners • Single parent families have increased rapidly • Domestic partnerships • Not limited to GBTL • Heterosexual “living together” couples

  7. Contemporary Family Structures • A contemporary sociological definition of a family is • A social unit of some number of people who are linked intimately • Related in some way • Usually living together • Engaging in sex • Having responsibility for rearing children • Functioning as an economic unit • A family has either a shared genetic heritage, or legal ties either of which socially recognize a bond • In which the boundaries are clear • And which enables tracking of who is related to whom over time

  8. Families and Sex • One of the primary functions of families is to reproduce the species/society • Families are one place that sexual activity is legitimatized by society • When engaged in by occupants of selected roles • Not all members can engage in sexual activities and only with certain other members • Society regulates sex outside of families for various reasons • Age • Disease control • To prevent or sanctions socially unacceptable behaviors

  9. Sex, Sexual orientations and related topics • Who is legally able to engage in sexual activity? • Married couples • Consenting adults • How have norms changed over time? • Courting • Dating • Changes in age

  10. The timing at ages of first sexual activity • Before Marriage? • Recent data shows more middle and high school students engaging in sexual activity • Oral • Vaginal • Historically boys began earlier than girls • Implies what? • Attitudes about pre-marital sex have become MUCH more tolerant since the 1970’s • The double standard has diminished in importance

  11. The timing at ages of first sexual activity • Before Marriage? • Recent data shows more middle and high school students engaging in sexual activity • Oral • Vaginal • Historically boys began earlier than girls • Implies what? • Attitudes about pre-marital sex have become MUCH more tolerant since the 1970’s • The double standard has diminished in importance

  12. Types of Families • Nuclear families– Extended families • Married with children households at an all time low in 2000 • Two Earner families • Single parent families • Blended families • Domestic partnerships-Civil Unions • Roommates

  13. Family Diversity • Defining characteristics • Not official sanction, legitimation • Are emotional, financial, other ties • Blood • Diversity in family types associated with diversity in sexual behavior

  14. Sexuality, Sexual Orientation, Sexual Behavior • In an era of increased sexual freedom some want to reintroduce courtship, betrothal, and chastity--- few teens follow this pattern • Studies of teens show sexual activity • Even virgins report having oral sex • Boys begin younger than girls, but the difference is diminishing. • Girls less satisfied, more guilt

  15. Sexuality, Sexual Orientation, Sexual Behavior • Attitudes toward sex changing • Decreased belief that premarital sex is always wrong: from 37% in 1972 to 20% in the 1990’s • Many teens who think it is good to remain a virgin still feel pressure to have sex • Double Standard ! • Stud good • Slut bad

  16. Sexuality, Sexual Orientation, Sexual Behavior • Types of Sexuality • Heterosexuality considered “normal” • Homosexuality, bisexuality needed explanation • Greatest obstacle to understanding or even studying is lack of reliable data • Gays and Lesbians hide their preferences • NORC’s GSS shows that tolerance increasing • Is homosexual behavior always wrong down from 2/3’ds to 56 from 1970’s to 1990’s

  17. Sexuality, Sexual Orientation, Sexual Behavior • Greater tolerance politically and by Corporations • Conservative backlash • Defense of Marriage act • Legal gay marriages • Impact on other aspects • Adoption • Parental rights • Etc.

  18. Sexuality, Sexual Orientation, Sexual Behavior • Reproductive rights • Contraception to Abortion • Contraceptives illegal in US until 1971 • Extended to minors in 1977 • Abortions illegal until 1973 • Continuing attempts to overcome this ruling • Both legal and terrorists • Decline in number of abortion providers • Partly due to laws and partly to murders

  19. Sexuality, Sexual Orientation, Sexual Behavior • New reproductive technologies • First test tube baby in 1978 • In Vitro fertilization • Ethical issues, Legal Issues • Multiple embryos: who owns them, who has custody • Surrogates and rights of egg/sperm donors • Who is the parent • Legal issues • Stem cell research • Social class

  20. Types of Families • Heterosexual • State sets terms and rights of each • Historically men ruled, women were essentially property • Now we think of partnerships • Still, a legal document and the state has its rules • In most states the husband decides where to live • Consequences if wife doesn’t live with hussband • Text views marriage as a power relationship

  21. Types of Families • Gender and the Division of Labor • Women spend more time on household chores than men do. • But men are doing more than in the past • Origin in the past: men worked outside the home, women in the home • No longer typical or even statistically normal • Social position of the housewife

  22. Types of Families • Caregiving • Children • Infants, preschool, elementary school • Elders • Parents • Federal Medical and Family Leave act • Consequences at home and at work

  23. Single Parent Family • 82% of children in single parent families live with mother • Causes of being a single parent • Divorce • Death • abandonment • Historically fathers were awarded custody of children • Most courts today do not use gender based assumptions in awarding custody

  24. No Fault divorce harms mothers • More custody decisions • Less lucrative employment • Limited child support payments • Leads to feminization of poverty

  25. Singles and roomates • Young heterosexuals not yet married is common conception • Older never married and widowed men and women • Stereotype of “swinging bachelor” or “party girl bachlorette” • For young people a deliberately temporary life style

  26. Domestic Partnerships • Living together • Heterosexual • Homosexual • Domestic partners • Long terms commitments without legal sanctions • Both sexualities • Consequences for partners and children

  27. Domestic Violence • Partner Abuse • Heterosexual • Homosexual • Child Abuse

  28. American Sexual Behavior • An empirical analysis of data about the sexual behavior of Americans • Smith, Tom American Sexual Behavior

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