Deborah Chambers

A Sociology of Family Life


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through family ties prevent people from engaging in free, passionate relationships. In his view, it was only through socialism that ‘individual sex love’ could occur and a communist society could lead to communal living, equality, sexual freedom and the collapse of the state.

      Feminist writers have criticized Engels for not giving sufficient weight to women’s issues. Although Engels distinguished between social production and reproduction, he subsumed reproduction under production by claiming that women’s liberation is dependent on economic liberation (Evans 2011). Engels’ work has also been criticized for using inaccurate anthropological sources. Nevertheless, his book represented a significant critique of the Victorian nuclear family and continues to reverberate as a daring critique of sexual inequality. By studying the connection between patriarchy and capitalism, he was able to address the question of sexual inequality and the family, both historically and politically. By exploring how social divisions arise through the family, Engels identified both production and reproduction as the material bases of society. This approach has been a key resource for subsequent sociologists in theorizing the intersection of class and gender. Engels made a significant contribution to feminism and the study of inequalities from a conflict-based approach. By contrast, the emergence of American sociological studies in the early twentieth century, addressed below, was concerned with explaining a systematic connection between the structures of capitalism and the composition of the family by using a consensus-based approach.

      Talcott Parsons, who outlined the basic principles of modern structural functionalism, viewed society as a social system defined in terms of ‘needs’ or ‘functions’. For Parsons, the various parts of each society contribute positively to the operation or functioning of the system as a whole. In this respect, he regarded the institution of the nuclear family as functional for the operation of industrial society as a system. He argued that the extended family of pre-industrial society was no longer viable. The family was necessarily transformed by industrialization from an extended, economic unit of production in rural societies into a small, mobile nuclear unit of consumption in urban society (Parsons 1956; Parsons and Bales 1956). Industrialization demands greater geographical and social mobility from its workforces. The family unit shrank in size to adapt to this new economy. The large, extended family of former times typically housed three generations of relatives under one roof, with several children, and was characterized by wide but durable kinship ties. By contrast, the new, lean, nuclear family of the 1950s comprised two parents and two children who lived independently from grandparents or other relatives.

      The nuclear family was viewed by Parsons as the most efficient unit for dealing with the challenges of modern society, through a specialization of roles between husband and wife. This new kind of family relied on the allocation of ‘instrumental’ and ‘affective’ roles between the married couple. The husband was expected to adopt the instrumental role of breadwinner and work outside the home, while the wife was expected to adopt the affective role of attending to the emotional and domestic needs of the family. Men’s instrumental role allowed them to adapt to paid employment outside the home. Women’s expressive role was tailored to childcare and domestic work. Through these family roles, this small nuclear family was defined as one that specializes in serving the emotional needs of adults and children to facilitate the adaptation of family members for a competitive and impersonal world beyond the home. Within the scope of structural functionalism, the shift to a nuclear family structure was explained by the functional needs of a capitalist economy. This new, smaller and more geographically mobile unit was viewed as morally superior and more efficient than that of the former extended family. Capitalism demanded small families as units of consumption capable of adjusting themselves to fit in with a new kind of employment market based on a particular gendered division of labour. This weakening of pre-industrial extended family ties was viewed as a progressive trend. It coincided with an erosion of traditional modes of nepotism in favour of meritocracy.

      Despite the theoretical deficiencies of functionalism, this perspective prevailed as the theoretical standard for most family sociology from the 1950s to the 1970s. Indeed, mid-twentieth-century research on the ‘modern family’ and families of the past was framed by the functional model, which reinforced the idea that family structure naturally graduated from an extended to a nuclear form. Selective research tended to refer to white families and western developments to confirm a particular social pattern. An extensive re-examination of this ‘Golden Age’ of the 1950s American family has since been prompted by a range of research that disputes these earlier historical assumptions.