Family and Gender

Family and Gender

Product ID: 7266

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Author: Margrit Pernau
Publisher: Sage Publications
Year: 2002
Language: English
Pages: 000
ISBN/UPC (if available): 0761996184

Description

Both family and gender are topics that have been discussed and debated at length. However, in recent years there has been a growing recognition that the two need to be studied together in order to understand their interdependence. This volume explores important themes relating to both gender and family and their interface.


Keeping this in mind, the contributors to this volume concentrate on four major propositions:
In the same way that gender cannot be culled directly from the ties of blood but involves a cultural construction.

It is no longer valid to regard the family as an anthropomorphic entity which plans and acts with one voice, its god being the good of every single member of the family, but necessary to see it as a space not only of harmony, but also of power relations. This involves a consistent gendering of the family and a reading of the traditional images of the family with a regard sharpened by gender awareness.

Far from being a private refuge protected from the onslaught of political forces, the family is decisively shaped by society and state. The distribution of functions between the family and other social institutions is open to constant negotiation.

To sharpen our understanding of the interaction of normative images of the family and social reality, it is necessary to focus on the margins of the family and to investigate those forms of living which either refuse to correspond to the traditional notion of the family or which are, for social or economic reasons, denied access to this model.

These themes are dealt with in the four corresponding sections of the volume, the fist covering the social history of the family; the second concentrating on images and symbolic practices; the third emphasizing the interaction between the family and the state; and the last stressing the fault lines of the family. An important feature of this volume is that it brings together perspectives from Germany and India, which together de-naturalise, de-biologise and de-mythologise the concept of family within the medium of gender.

Exploring important themes relating to both gender and family and their interface, and providing a unique cross-cultural perspective, this volume will be of interest to scholars and students in the fields of gender studies, family studies, sociology, social anthropology, political science and cultural studies.