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Love, Sex, and Marriage

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Title: Love, Sex, and Marriage


1
Love, Sex, and Marriage
2
  • Sex, Love, and Marriage
  • Reading 1) Kinship and Marriage 2) Jankowiak
    and Fischer, A Cross-Cultural Perspective on
    Romantic Love, Ethnology. 
  • Family and Kinship Practices ????
  • Reading M. Wolf, Uterine Families and the
    Womens Community P. L. Kilbride, African
    Polygyny Family Values and Contemporary Changes 
  • Reading 1) Rubie Watson, The Named and the
    Nameless 2) V. Fong, Chinas One-Child Policy
    and the Empowerment of Urban Daughters

3
Anthropology and the Study of Kinship Practices
  • Kinship (family, marriage, gender) forming the
    basis of the discipline
  • comparable to logic in philosophy and the nude
    in art

4
Culture and Reproduction
  • Every human population, at all times, has had
    culturally constructed ways to either promote or
    limit population growth.
  • Three general modes of reproduction
  • -the foraging mode existed for most of human
    pre-history and had low rates of population
    growth.
  • -the agricultural mode emerged with permanent
    settlements had increased birth rates.
  • -industrialized mode (demographic transition)
  • Anthropologists have done much less research on
    reproduction than on production.

5
The difficulty of conducting field research on
sexual intercourse and fertility
  • Sexuality involves private, secret beliefs and
    behaviors. The ethics of participant observation
    disallow intimate observation or participation,
    data can only be obtained indirectly.
  • Ex.How many times did you have intercourse last
    year?
  • Malinowskis first anthropology study of
    sexuality based on fieldwork in the Trobriands.
  • Sexual lived of children sexual techniques love
    magic erotic dreams husband-wife jealousy, etc.
  • Note Since the late 1980s, anthropologists have
    paid a lot of attention to the study of
    sexuality, given the increase of STDS and
    HIV/AIDS.

6
When to Begin Having Intercourse?
  • Biologically speaking, sexual intercourse between
    a fertile female and a fertile make is normally
    required for human reproduction.
  • Cultures socialize children about the appropriate
    time to begin sexual intercourse. Guidelines for
    initiating sexual intercourse differ by gender,
    class, race, and ethnicity.
  • Cross-culturally, rules more strictly forbid
    premarital sexual activity of girls than of boys.
  • In some cultures, a high value is placed on a
    woman becoming pregnant soon after she reaches
    menarche, making teenage pregnancy a desired
    condition instead of a social problem (as
    perceived by many experts in the US and China).

7
How often should one have intercourse?
  • The wide range in frequency of sexual intercourse
    confirms the role of culture in shaping sexual
    desire.
  • A study of reported intercourse frequency for
    Euro-Americans in the US and Hindus in India
    revealed that Indians had intercourse far less
    frequently (less than twice a week) than the
    Euro-Americans did (two to three times a week) in
    all age groups.
  • Fertility is higher in India than many other
    parts of the world where religiously based
    restrictions on sexual intercourse do not exist.

8
Fertility Decision Making and Fertility Control
  • Family-level
  • National-level
  • Global-level
  • Family planning programs of many types
  • Induced-abortion
  • The new reproduction technologies

9
Love, Sex and Marriage
  • What is marriage?
  • -control of sexual relations
  • -rule of sexual access
  • -incest taboo
  • -endogamy and exogamy
  • What is the distinction between marriage and
    mating?
  • Why is marriage a cultural universal?

10
Defining MARRIAGE
  • No single definition of marriage is adequate to
    account for all of the diversity found in
    marriages cross-culturally.
  • A non-ethnocentric definition of marriage is a
    relationship between one or more men (male or
    female) and one or more women (female or male)
    who are recognized by society as having a
    continuing claim to the right of sexual access to
    one another.
  • Although in many societies husbands and wives
    live together as members of the same household,
    this is not the true in all societies.
  • Most marriages around the world tend to involve a
    single spouse (monogamy). Yet most societies
    permit and regard as most desirable, marriage of
    an individual to multiple spouses (polygamy).

11
According to Edmund Leach, marriage includes
  • Social identity of children
  • (who is the legal father or legal mother ?)
  • Regulating sexual intercourse
  • Rights to spouses labor / sexual division of
    labor
  • Rights over spouses property
  • Joint fund of property rules of inheritance
  • Establishing relations between spouses their
    relatives, or relations of affinity
  • ????????????????

12
Perspectives from bio-anthropology
  • Among primates, the human female is unusual in
    her ability in sexual activity whenever she wants
    to or whenever her culture tells her it is
    appropriate, irrespective of whether or not she
    is fertile.
  • Although such activity may reinforce social bonds
    between individuals, competition for sexual
    sexual access can be disruptive, so every society
    has rules that govern such access.
  • Reproductive success is defined as the passing
    of genes onto the next generation in a way that
    they too can pass those genes on.

13
Perspectives from bio-anthropology
  • Whatever their virtues, men are more violent than
    women. Why do men kill, rape, and wage war, and
    what can be done about it? Drawing on the latest
    discoveries about human evolution and about our
    closest living relatives, the great apes, Demonic
    Males offers some startling new answers to these
    questions.

14
marriage vs. mating
  • All animals mate (form a sexual bond with
    individuals of the opposite sex). In some
    species, the bond last no longer than a single
    sex act. While some animals mate with a single
    individual others mate with several.
  • Only marriage, however, is backed by social,
    legal, and economic forces.
  • Mating is biological, marriage is cultural.

15
Cultural Regulations of Sexuality Permissiveness
vs. Restrictiveness
  • Premarital sex
  • Preparation for later marriage roles given
    complete instructions in all forms of sexual
    expression trial marriages.
  • Disgrace responsibility of guarding the chastity
    and reputation of daughters of marriageable age
    as a burden of the mother display of
    blood-stained sheets as test of pre-marital
    chastity
  • Sex in marriage
  • - Positions patterns privacy occasions
  • Extramarital sex
  • -not uncommon in most societies a difference
    between the restrictive code and actual practice
    double standard (gender bias) rumors
  • Homesexuality

16
Why is marriage (almost) universal?
  • The need to regulate sexual relations so that
    competition over sexual access does not introduce
    a disruptive, combative influence into society.
  • The specific form marriage takes is related to
    who has rights to offspring that normally result
    from sexual intercourse, as well as how property
    is distributed.

17
The near universality of incest taboo
  • INCEST refers to sexual relations with a close
    relative (parents/children/siblings
  • The incest taboo is a cultural universal (which
    can be loosely translated as ??)
  • What constitutes incest varies widely from
    culture to culture and a true convincing
    explanation is yet to be advanced.
  • Ex. Difficulties of defining DIRT.

18
Explaining INCEST Taboo
  • Instinctive Horror
  • This theory argues that Homo sapiens are
    genetically programmed to avoid incest.
  • This theory has serious flaws.
  • Cultural universality does not necessarily entail
    a genetic basis (e.g., fire making).
  • If genetically programmed, a formal incest taboo
    would be unnecessary.
  • Cannot explain why in some societies people can
    marry their cross cousins (children of ones
    brother and sister) but not their parallel
    cousins (children of two brothers and two
    sisters).

19
INCEST Taboo
  • Biological Degeneration
  • Incest taboo developed in response to abnormal
    offspring born from incestuous unions.
  • A decline in fertility and survival does
    accompany brother-sister mating across several
    generations.
  • However, human marriage patterns are based on
    specific cultural beliefs rather than universal
    concerns about biological degeneration several
    generations in the future.
  • Neither instinctive horror nor biological
    degeneration can explain the very widespread
    custom of marrying cross cousins.
  • Fears about degeneration cannot explain why
    sexual unions between parallel cousins but not
    cross cousins are so often tabooed.

20
Explaining the Taboo
  • Attempt and Contempt
  • Malinowski (and Freud) argued that the incest
    taboo originated to direct sexual feelings away
    from one's family to avoid disrupting the family
    structure and relations (familiarity increases
    the chances for attempt).
  • The opposite theory argues that people are less
    likely to be sexually attracted to those with
    whom they have grown up (familiarity breeds
    contempt). ?????
  • Ex. Kibbutz in Israel

21
Kibbutz and the control of sexual relations ?
  • Although children raised together on an Israel
    kibbutz rarely marry one another, it is not
    because of any instinctive desire to avoid
    mating with people who are close.
  • They marry outside their group because
    service in the military takes them out of their
    kibbutz

22
Royal Incest
  • Royal families in widely diverse cultures have
    engaged in what would be called incest, even in
    their own cultures.
  • The manifest function of royal incest in
    Polynesia was the necessity of marriage partners
    having commensurate mana.
  • The latent function of Polynesian royal incest
    was that it maintained the ruling ideology.
  • The royal incest, generally, had a latent
    economic function it consolidated royal wealth.

23
Royal incest
24
Marry out or die out?
  • A more accepted argument the taboo originated to
    ensure exogamy. Incest taboos force people to
    create and maintain wide social networks by
    extending peaceful relations beyond one's
    immediate group. Incest taboos are seen as an
    adaptively advantageous cultural construct.
  • This argument focuses on the adaptive social
    results of exogamy, such as alliance formation,
    not simply on the idea of biological
    degeneration.
  • Incest taboos also function to increase a group's
    genetic diversity

25
Perspectives from sociocultural anthropology
  • Despite the potentially harmful biological
    results of systematic inbreeding, human marriage
    patterns are based on specific cultural beliefs
    rather than universal concerns about biological
    degeneration several generations in the future.

26
Marriage Prohibition in the US
  • State laws prohibited the marriage of some
    relatives (parent-child and sibling marriages
    marriages between first cousins)
  • Cousin prohibitions were enacted long before the
    discovery of the genetic mechanism of disease
  • Powerful myth based on a discredited social
    evolutionary theory and contradicted by the
    results of modern genetic research
  • Underlying cultural logic

27
GIFT
  • means present in English
  • means poison in German
  • means married in the Scandinavian languages.
  • Q any significance for kinship analysis?

28
Marriage as Group Alliance exchange between
givers and takers
  • One classical anthropology theory defines
    marriage as the exchange of gift between two
    groups - wife-givers and wife-takers
  • Ideally there is a balanced exchange between the
    givers (brides family) and the takers (grooms
    family)
  • Rules of balanced/expected reciprocity
  • Marriage payment brideprice/bridewealth/bride
    service dowry
  • Marriage strategy hypergamy vs. hypogamy
  • Marriage rules endogamy exogamy

29
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30
Endogamy
  • Endogamy and exogamy may operate in a single
    society.
  • Endogamy can be seen as functioning to express
    and maintain social difference, particularly in
    stratified societies.
  • Homogamy is the practice of marrying someone
    similar to you in terms of background, social
    status, aspirations, and interests.

31
Example of Endogamy
  • India's caste system.
  • - It is argued that, although India's varna and
    America's "races" are historically distinct, they
    share a caste-like ideology of endogamy.

32
Caste / casta /jati (stratification system in
South Asia)
  • Castes breeds or types
  • (ascribed status)
  • Brahmans (priests)
  • Kshatriyas ( nobles and warriors)
  • Vaishyas (merchants or skilled artisans)
  • Shudras (common labors)
  • Harijians (outcasts / untouchables)

33
Marriage and Jati Hierarchy
  • Endogamy
  • (marrying within Jati)
  • Hypogamy
  • (marrying down hierarchy)
  • Hypergamy
  • (marrying up hierarchy)
  • -avoid ritual pollution

34
Other examples of endogamy?
  • Religious
  • Ex. Orthodox Jewish, Muslims (including the
    Chinese Hui),
  • Race/ethnicity
  • Problems of crosscultural marriages?
  • Socioeconomic class
  • How about homogamy

35
Marital Rights and Same-Sex Marriage
  • Most anthropologists would agree same-sex
    marriages are legitimate unions between two
    individuals because like other kinds of marriage,
    same-sex marriage can allocate all of the rights
    discussed by anthropologist Leach.
  • In the U.S., since same-sex marriage is illegal,
    same-sex couples are denied many of these rights
    (e.g., rights to the labor of the other, over the
    other's property, relationships of affinity with
    the other's relatives).

36
Marital Rights and Same-Sex Marriage
  • There are ethnographic examples in which same-sex
    marriages are culturally sanctioned (e.g., the
    Nuer, the Azande, the Igbo, berdaches, and the
    Lovedu).

37
Bridewealth and Dowry
  • Particularly in descent-based societies, marriage
    partners represent an alliance of larger social
    units.
  • Bridewealth is a gift from the husband's kin to
    the wife's, which stabilizes the marriage by
    acting as an insurance against divorce.
  • Dowry, less common than bridewealth, correlates
    with low status for women.
  • Fertility is often considered essential to the
    stability of a marriage.
  • Polygyny (man taking more than one wife) may be
    practiced to ensure fertility.

38
The marriage of women to the church
  • In Europe, where both men and women inherit
    family wealth, the marriage of women to the
    church as nuns passed wealth that might otherwise
    have gone to husbands and offspring to the Church
    instead.

39
Love and (monogamous) Marriage
  • Love and marriage, love and marriageThey go
    together like a horse and carriageThis I'll tell
    you brotherYou can't have one without the
    otherLove and marriage, love and marriageIt's
    an institute you can't disparageAsk the local
    gentryAnd they will say it's elementaryTry,
    try, try to separate themIt's an illusionTry,
    try, try, and you will only comeTo this
    conclusion
  • Love and marriage, love and marriageThey go
    together like a horse and carriageDad was told
    by motherYou can't have one without the
    otherTry, try, try to separate themIt's an
    illusionTry, try, try, and you will only comeTo
    this conclusionLove and marriage, love and
    marriageThey go together like a horse and
    carriageDad was told by motherYou can't have
    one without the other

40
Romantic Love and (Monogamous) Marriage
  • Typically, anthropologists have overlooked
    romantic love as a factor in the interpersonal
    relationships of the people they study, but this
    has begun to change.
  • There is romantic love in cultures around the
    world.
  • As motifs of romantic love have become more
    widespread, globally, it has come to play an
    increasingly important role in the selection of
    marriage partners.
  • In a survey of ethnographies from 166 cultures,
    they found what they considered clear evidence
    that romantic love was known in 147 of them 87
    percent.
  • Evidence from tales about lovers, or folklore,
    that offered love potions or other advice on
    making someone fall in love.
  • While romantic love appears to be a human
    universal, it is a still an alien idea that in
    many cultures that such infatuation has anything
    to do with the choice of a spouse.
  • Source Jankowiak and Fischer, A Cross-Cultural
    Perspective on Romantic Love, Ethnology

41
Romantic Love as a Cultural Construction
  • The media propagate popular culture, and images
    from around the world are creeping into everyday
    lives.
  • Cultural sources are being merged in ways that
    are forcing the redefinition of identity across
    the globe.

42
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43
Divorce
  • Divorce is found in many different societies.
  • - Marriages that are political alliances between
    groups are harder to break up than marriages that
    are more individual affairs.
  • - Payments of bridewealth also discourage
    divorce.
  • - Divorce is more common in matrilineal
    societies as well as societies in which
    postmarital residence is matrilocal (such as Naxi
    of SW China)
  • - Divorce is harder in patrilocal societies as
    the woman may be less inclined to leave her
    children who, as members of their father's
    lineage, would need to stay him.

44
Divorce in the U.S.
  • The U.S. has one of the world's highest divorce
    rates (a steep rise between 1970 and 1994
  • The U.S. has a very large percentage of
    professional women.
  • patterns of residence and family types vary with
    socioeconomic class (ex. extended families as a
    response to poverty)
  • - Americans value independence.

45
Plural Marriages
  • Polygamy
  • Illegal in North America and Post-1949 China
  • serial monogamy in postindustrial societies
    (multiple marriages and divorces)
  • Polygyny (multiple wives)
  • - Practiced in patriarchal societies (ex.
    pre-revolutionary China, some African countries
    and elsewhere in the world)
  • Polyandry (multiple husbands)
  • Ex. Fraternal polyandry in Tibet (brothers share
    a wife)

46
Polygyny vs. Polyandry
47
Is Polygamy confusing or just a matter of family
values?
48
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49
African Polygyny Family values and contemporary
changes
50
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51
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52
Enculturation/ Socialization and the Life Cycle
  • The main agents of SOCIALIZATION (enculturation)
    family, school, peer groups, the mass media,
    and the work (particular attention to gender
    socialization) .
  • The main stages of life cycle identified as1)
    infancy 2)childhood and adolescence, 3) young
    and mature adulthood, and 4) old age
  • Anthropological notions of social birth and
    social person
  • Social death vs. biological death

53
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54
Readings
  • Jankowiak and Fischer, A Cross-Cultural
    Perspective on Romantic Love, Ethnology.
  • M. Wolf, Uterine Families and the Womens
    Community.
  • Philip L. Kilbride
  • African Polygyny Family values and contemporary
    changes
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