Deborah Chambers

A Sociology of Family Life


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proposed that the small, nuclear version of the family was perfectly adapted to the needs of modern society. He introduced new ideas about how the nuclear family’s sex roles operate to reproduce the population and a stable workforce. For Parsons, the family served two vital functions: the socialization of children, and the stabilization of adult personalities. The strict division of sex roles, between the father’s instrumental role as breadwinner and the mother’s expressive role as homemaker, was viewed as well adapted to modern industrial society. The functionalist model has had a major impact on official discourses about the ideal nuclear family in the UK and USA from the 1960s. It influenced academic research and government strategies up to the late twentieth century through policies on child and family poverty, including childrearing practices, childhood education, the role and moral framework of parenthood, fertility and access to new reproductive technologies. Chapter 1 also assesses the impact of functionalist approaches in studies of Black and minority ethnic families in the USA and UK, where extended and matriarchal,3 one-parent families were perceived as deviations from a nuclear family form.

      Public concerns about the erosion of mutual responsibility and long-term commitment lie at the heart of arguments about a decline in family values. Chapter 2 explores theories and debates from the 1990s about changes in intimate relationships. The concept of ‘individualization’ advanced by a group of scholars including Giddens, and Beck and Beck-Gernsheim, to explain the rise of more egalitarian intimate relationships is assessed in depth. The chapter explains changing ideas about love and commitment, the changing nature of the self and society, and the notion of the pure relationship. Children are held as providers of a more permanent love during a time when long-term commitment between adults is suspect. These explanations are challenged by a range of evidence from empirical research which is addressed in the second half of the chapter. A series of recent and mainly qualitative studies on intimacy has provoked a reassessment of late modern theory and fed into critiques of the individualization thesis.

      Chapter 4 traces changes in childhood. It highlights the tensions between opposing accounts of childhood: a traditional romantic ideal which affirms that the right of a child is ‘to be a child’, and the idea of the child as an active agent with rights. The practicalities of contemporary childrearing practices are set against this romantic ideal and often lead to confusion among both parents and children. Childrearing is now depicted as a negotiation between parent and child, within a process monitored by the state and other agencies such as schools. The impact on childhood of post-divorce families, lone parenting and poverty are examined. Contemporary approaches to childhood draw attention to children’s accelerating contact with the media, commercialism and new digital technologies. Children’s sustained engagement with media devices complicates the idealized and sentimental notion of childhood. For example, the introduction of a wide range of media gadgets into the home, together with children’s access to mobile devices, prompts a renegotiation of household relationships between children and parents. The chapter also shows that in certain non-western societies, childhood is now shaped by elements of privatized and individualized family life familiar to western societies, suggesting that a western trend of home-based privatized childhoods may be a globalizing tendency. Changes occurring in contemporary urban China are outlined to offer an insight into the way these changes are impacting transnationally.

      Scholars have tended to study globalization in terms of capital, changing state and market mechanisms and new technologies. In chapter 6, globalization is approached in a specific manner that spotlights the ways in which globalization shapes and is shaped by families. Family systems and family relations interconnect with and support large-scale processes of economic globalization. How families negotiate and are impacted by international migration and other transnational connections is addressed. Patterns of marriage, migration and global processes have strengthened, reshaped or destabilized families. These trends are analysed by focusing on topics ranging from the migration of care workers to arranged marriages, internet dating and mail-order brides. Local and international marriage and labour markets are interconnected processes that are mediated by local practices and customs of kinship and marriage.