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Summary SOCIOLOGY A LEVEL FAMILY NOTES (A*) CA$9.92   Add to cart

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Summary SOCIOLOGY A LEVEL FAMILY NOTES (A*)

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family unit textbook notes, clear and concise, got me an A*. super easy to memorise.

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Functionalist
Nuclear family - most efficient form of family in meeting society's functional
prerequisites (needs)

 Two children
 Heterosexual, married couple
 2 generations living in the same household
 Man = instrumental (wage earner)
 Woman = expressive (emotional support)

GP Murdock -

 'The nuclear family is universal human social grouping'
 'Either as the sole prevailing form of the family or as the basic unit from which more
complex forms compounded'
 'exists as a distinct and strongly functional group in every society'
 He is saying that the nuclear family is the basis of all families
 Strongly favours the nuclear family
 Argues that it is universal - based this on his study of 250 societies
 4 Functional prerequisites -
o Stable satisfaction of the sex drive - preventing the social disruption caused by
a sexual 'free for all'
o Reproduction - without this, society could not continue
o Primary socialisation - makes sure that the next generation hold societies
norms and values - value consensus
o Economic security - meets its members economic needs e.g. Food and shelter
 Functionalists argue that the traditional nuclear family is best suited to meet these
functional prerequisites of society - its a stable form of family and stable families
underpin social order and economic stability

Parsons -

 Updated Murdock's theory - in modern, western societies, the state provides education
and performs an economic function (welfare provision)
 The family still has two irreducible functions -
 Primary socialisation -
o Families specifically teach children the norms and values associated with the
family
o Other institutions e.g. School, the media, religion - teach children the universal
norms and values - wider society
o Primary socialisation and secondary socialisation
 Stabilisation of adult personalities -
o Families help prevent adults from behaving in disruptive or dysfunctional
ways - encourages them to conform to social norms
o The family also provides emotional support for its members
o Warm bath theory - when a man comes home from work he can relax into his
family like a warm bath - take away the stress and refresh him
 Segregated conjugal roles (marriage roles) -

, o Male - instrumental role - breadwinning
o Female - expressive role - nurturing
o Gendered division of labour - biologically based
o E.g. Women give birth - expressive role
 Functional fit theory (1955) -
o The kinds and range of functions a family performs depends on the type of
society in which it is found
o Also determines what sort of structure it will have -
 The extended family - 3 generational - found in pre- industrial societies
 The nuclear family - 2 generational - found in modern industrial
society
 Why the extended family has given way to the nuclear family as society has become
industrialised -
o A geographically mobile workforce -
o In traditional pre industrial society people often lived their whole lives in the
same village
o In modern society - industries constantly spring up and decline in different
parts of the country - people must move where their job is
o Its easier for the compact nuclear family to move than the three generation
extended family
o A socially mobile workforce -
o Modern society required a skilled and technically competent workforce -
essential that the most talented people take on the most important jobs
o In modern society - status is gained not ascribed - makes social mobility
possible
o Parsons argues - the nuclear family is better equipped to meet the needs of
industrial society - if sons leave home then there wont be tension between his
father (the head of the household) and him if he has a higher achieved status at
work
o The nuclear family has no binding obligations to support the extended family
 Loss of functions -
o The pre industrial family was a multi functional unit
o Both a unit of production (family members worked together) and a unit of
consumption (feeding and clothing its members)
o More self sufficient than the nuclear family - health and welfare and meeting
most individual and social needs
o Parsons - when society industrialises - family loses many of its functions
o Ceases to be a unit of production - work moves into the factories - unit of
consumption only
o Loses many of its functions to education and the health service
o These loss of functions means that the family specialises in two irreducible
functions - primary socialisation of children and the stabilisation of adult
personalities
 Evidence against Parsons -
o Young and Willmott - the pre industrial family was nuclear - parents and
children working together - late childbearing and low life expectancy meant
that grandparents were unlikely to be alive very long after the birth of their
grandchild

, o Parsons - industrialisation brought the nuclear family - Young and Willmott
argue that the hardship of the early industrial period gave rise to 'mum-centred'
working class extended family - mothers and their married daughters
 Evaluation of functionalism -
 Very rosy picture of the family
 Dated - lacks temporal validity
 Ignores suppressive and destructive sides of the family - dysfunction
 Marxist - Leach (1967) -
 The nuclear family has become so isolated that it is a very destructive institution
which supresses individuality and teaches blind obedience
 Postmodernists - functionalists ignore family diversity and the fact that other forms of
family can carry out all of the functions that Murdock and Parsons argue are only
suited to the nuclear family - not necessarily universal
 Radical Psychiatrists - families smother individuality - leads to an increase of mental
health problems in later life
 Liberal feminists - nuclear family is oppressive for women - lack of choice and
gendered roles diminishes the development of women's rights and female
empowerment
 Marxist feminists - expressive role only benefits capitalism - women reproduce the
workforce
 Radical feminists - there can never be equality in the home if men and women live
together - patriarchy ensures male dominance


New Right
Intro -

 Similar to functionalists - more of a political movement than a sociological theory
 Conservative government - back to basics campaign - reaction to the changes of the
1960s and 1970s - social attitudes more relaxed
 Want a return to traditional values - family, education, law and order
 See anything that goes against these values as deviant
 The New Right support a society like that imagined by functionalists
 Support government policies that try to change society in that way e.g. Tax breaks

Overview -

 Combines neo liberal economics with more traditional views on social issues
 They believe that in the late 20th century, consensus broke down in many societies
 The welfare state has undermined the traditional nuclear family - created a large
increase in lone parent families - inadequate socialisation - particularly for boys with
no father figure - underclass
 Ideas highly influential on modern Conservatism in 1970's onwards - Thatcher and
Reagan - more of a political theory than a sociological theory

New Right views on family -

 Supports very traditional values and institutions

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