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CULTURAL VARIATIONS IN RELATIONSHIPS SUMMARY

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PERMANENT VS IMPERMANENT. SUB-CULTURAL VARIATIONS. GENDER DIFFERENCES. SOCIAL ... PERMANENT AND IMPERMANENT RELATIONSHIPS. GOODWIN '99 looked at divorce rates. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: CULTURAL VARIATIONS IN RELATIONSHIPS SUMMARY


1
CULTURAL VARIATIONS IN RELATIONSHIPS(SUMMARY)
  • INDIVIDUALISTIC VS COLLECTIVIST 
  • MONOGAMY VS POLYGAMY  
  • PERMANENT VS IMPERMANENT

2
SUB-CULTURAL VARIATIONS
  • GENDER DIFFERENCES
  •  
  • SOCIAL CLASS DIFFERENCES
  •  
  • HISTORICAL DIFFERENCES

3
UNDERSTUDIED RELATIONSHIPS
  • GAY AND LESBIAN
  • ELECTRONIC FRIENDSHIP
  • CHATROOMS AND CYBERAFFAIRS
  • THE EFFECT OF SMS MESSAGING

4
CULTURAL VARIATIONS IN RELATIONSHIPS
  • Most studies on relationships have been done on
    white US and British heterosexual couples. 
  • Historical changes
  • Mosher, in the late 1800s asked her female
    patients about their sexual lives.
  • Middle of century
  • Sex is for reproduction. Unpleasurable
  • Latter part of century

    Sex is linked to passionate love.

5
Western and non-western cultures
  • Goodwin (95) argued that the key difference
    between most Western societies and most Eastern
    societies is that the former tend to be
    individualistic where the latter tend to be
    collectivist.
  • It is expected that in Western societies that
    individuals take responsibility for their own
    lives.
  • In Eastern societies, in contrast, it is expected
    that individuals will regard themselves mainly as
    part of family and social groups, and that their
    decisions will be influenced strongly by
    obligations to other people.

6
INDIVIDUALISTIC AND COLLECTIVIST
  • Individualistic people make decisions on their
    own and take responsibility for their own lives.
  • Basis for marriage choice heart 
  • Collectivist People see themselves as part of a
    social group and decisions are influenced by
    obligations to others.
  • Basis for marriage choice social status

7
INDIVIDUALISTIC COLLECTIVIST
  • Romantic love is the basis of marriage
  • In individualistic societies people have more
    friendships but are less close
  • Strengthening family ties is the basis for
    marriage
  • In collectivist societies people have fewer but
    closer friendships

8
Western or Eastern?
India Pakistan
USA
China
England
Japan
Australia
Germany
9
Question
  • Do you think love is important to you in a
    marriage?
  • Do you think there will be any change in other
    societies?

10
Romance marriages
A P F C
  • Levine et al. (95)
  • To compare the importance of love in marriage in
    different societies.
  • Collected evidence on love and marriage from both
    Eastern and Western societies.
  • Their key finding was that there was a
    correlation of 0.56 between a societys
    individualism and perceived necessity of love in
    a marriage.
  • They concluded that there is a strong tendency
    for members of an individualistic society to
    regard love as more important for marriage than
    did members of collectivist societies.

11
Friendships
  • There is one other important difference between
    individualistic and collectivist societies, which
    applies to friendships.
  • As Goodwin pointed out people in collectivist
    societies tend to have fewer but closer
    friendships than people in individualistic
    societies.

12
Question.
  • Which female body shape is more attractive to
    you, pink or red?
  • Do you think there will be any change in other
    societies?

13
Cross-cultural differences in preference in
female body
  • Anderson et al. (92)
  • To see if there is a difference in preference of
    body size between cultures with a plentiful food
    supply and those with a scarce food supply.
  • Compared the preferred female body size in 54
    different cultures and then divided these
    cultures into differences of food supply.

A P F C
14
Findings
In view of the obsessive focus on slimness in
women in Western cultures, it comes as a surprise
to discover that heavy women are preferred to
slim women in the greater majority of cultures
studied by Anderson et al. Presumably it occurs
because heavy women in cultures with unreliable
food supplies are better equipped with resources
for child bearing.
C
15
Question
  • Males would you prefer an older or younger wife?
  • Females would you prefer an older or younger
    husband?
  • Do you think there will be any change in other
    societies?

16
Relative Age sociobiological approach
  • In spite of various cultural differences in
    standards of physical attractiveness, there are
    also some important similarities. Buss (89)
    studies 37 cultures around the world, and found
    that men in all of these cultures preferred women
    who were younger than themselves, and women liked
    older men (except for Spain).
  • He also found that personal qualities of kindness
    and intelligence were regarded as important in
    virtually all cultures he studied.
  • There are various reasons for men to prefer
    younger women. Can you think of any???
  • The main reason is that younger women are more
    capable of producing and looking after offspring.

17
Monogamy and polygyny
One male, one female
One male, many females
  • In Western societies it is the norm for one male
    to have one female but in many Eastern societies
    it is acceptable for one male to have many wives.
  • Arguments that favour polygyny are
    sociobiological.
  • Males that impregnate many females improves his
    chances of passing on his genes.
  • For females a man that can attract a harem must
    have power so it is likely that the offspring
    will inherit this.

18
Quiz
  • Are Western cultures individualistic or
    collectivist?
  • What did Levine et el. Find in their study into
    romantic marriages?
  • What did Yelsma (98) find?
  • Why do men prefer younger wives?
  • Give one argument for polygyny.

19
VOLUNTARY AND ARRANGED RELATIONSHIPS
  • SHAVER, WU AND SCHWARTZ report that the Chinese
    associate romantic love with sorrow and pain.
  • They believe that the Western idea of basing
    marriage on romance is unrealistic. 
  • YELSMA AND ATHAPPILY 80 compared Indian
    marriages in India and North America.
  • No major differences

20
HUNTER-GATHERERS
  • WESTEN 96 studied 42 hunter-gatherer tribes 
  • 26 tribes - evidence of romantic love
  • 6 tribes - individuals had complete freedom to
    choose
  • 36 tribes marriages were arranged by the
    parents

21
EVALUATIONS
  •  1. In individualistic societies, parents may
    still try to influence their children 
  • 2. In collectivist societies, parents still want
    their children to be happy.

22
PERMANENT AND IMPERMANENT RELATIONSHIPS
  • GOODWIN 99 looked at divorce rates. 
  • CHINA 4 Divorce is considered shameful 
  • USA - 45 Divorce is accepted

23
(No Transcript)
24
SIMMEL
  • proposed that high divorce rates in
    individualistic societies is due to the idea of
    an ideal partner. 
  • In individualistic societies, the family is
    nuclear (mum, dad and small number of children)
    so the adults rely heavily on just one other
    person. 
  • In collectivist societies, the family is extended
  • (includes grandparents, uncles and aunts) 
  • Collectivist subcultures e.g. English Asians, New
    York Jews, have greater marital stability

25
Western and Non-Western Cultures
3 Goodwin argued the key difference between
Western and Eastern societies is
Western
Eastern
Collectivistic
Individualistic
Individuals will regard themselves part of family
and social groups
Individuals are independent
Decisions will be influenced strongly by
obligations to other people
Take responsibility for their own lives
HSU (1981)
Chinese asks What will other people say?
American asks How does my heart feel?
Those in individualist western societies tend to
stress the personality of a spouse
Those in collectivist eastern societies favour
arranged marriages based on social status.
26
Therefore cross cultural research has the
potential to be highly informative about human
behaviour, but also has many important weaknesses
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