Wife S And Two

Wife S And Two




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Review Marriage involving one wife and several husbands: P__________ Marriage involving one husband several wives: P__________ A type of marriage in which the brother of a deceased man is obliged to marry his brother's widow: L_____ Marriage A type of marriage in which the sister of a deceased woman is obligated to marry her sister’s widower: S______ Marriage This usually involves the simultaneous marriage of a brother-sister pair from two households: Si______ Ex____ Marriage Hypergamy Vs. Hypogamy Endogamy Vs. Exogamy
GUESS THIS THEORIST -He coined term “sociology” (socius and logos) -He proposed that society must be studied using s_______c me______d but he did not apply it himself.
SOURCE OF KNOWLEDGE IN THE PAST Theological stage Metaphysical stage Positivism
Social analysis need to understand women's status and issues. She wrote the first book on sociological methods. Impacts of economy, law, trade, health, and population on social problems. Who is theorist?
EARLY THINKERS – Studied “evolutionary” change in society – He coined the concept of “survival of the fittest” and he called this concept as S_____l Darwinism. – Society evolve, change, over time. – Natural for people to be rich or poor.
EARLY THINKERS – Behavior must be understood within larger s_____l context – Father of Sociology – How modern society maintain social cohesion – Theoretical work on suicide. – A_____ie- loss of di______on felt in a society when social control has become in_____ctive– when people loss their sense of purpose.
EARLY THINKERS Who? – To comprehend behavior, one must learn s_______e meaning people attach to actions. – Social actions or behaviors must be understood in terms of the meanings and purposes attached in them. – V_______n (f____ir-s____ay-en), german for understanding)
EARLY THINKERS Society divided between two cl_____s that clash in pursuit of i______s Who?
MODERN DEVELOPMENTS – Black sociologist assisted struggle for racially egalitarian or free society – K_______e essential in combating prejudice – Scientific principles in studying social problems – Do_____e con_______ss---divided individual’s identity in two or more social realities, e. g. , being black in a white society. Guess this theorist?
TWENTIETH-CENTURY DEVELOPMENTS The looking-glass self theory explains that an individual’s self identity construction is based on how ______ view the _______. C____es C___y
Module 2 █ Charles Horton Cooley (1864– 1929) – Used sociological perspective to examine face-to-face groups (organizations) – The looking-glass self ----an individual’s self identity construction is based on how others view the individual.
– Combined intellectual inquiry, social service work, and political activism – Co-founded Hull House – First American woman to be awarded a Nobel Prize J_____e A_____ms
MODERN DEVELOPMENTS – Combined theory and research – Proponent of the manifest and latent functions – Developed explanation of deviant behavior R____t Me____n
MAJOR THEORETICAL PERSPECTIVES █ Functionalist perspective █ Conflict perspective █ Interactionist perspective
FUNCTIONALIST PERSPECTIVE Emphasizes the way parts of a society are structured to maintain its stability. █ Viewed society as vast network of connected parts (Parsons, 1979) █ Each helps maintain the system as a whole █
Module 3 CONFLICT PERSPECTIVE █ █ Assumes social behavior best understood in terms of conflict or tension between competing groups The Marxist view: Conflict is part of everyday life in all societies – Conflict theorists are interested in how institutions may help maintain privileges of some groups and keep others subservient
CONFLICT PERSPECTIVE █ █ Assumes social behavior best understood in terms of ____ between competing groups. Conflict theorists interested in how institutions may help m _______ privileges of some groups and keep others subservient.
Module 3 CONFLICT PERSPECTIVE █ The Feminist view – Sees inequality in gender as central to all behavior and organization – Often allied with conflict theory – Broadened social behavior by extending analysis beyond male point of view
INTERACTIONIST PERSPECTIVE Generalizes about everyday forms of social interaction to explain society as a whole █ How people use symbols to establish meaning █
INTERACTIONIST PERSPECTIVE – George Herbert Mead (1863– 1931) is regarded as founder of interactionist perspective, – Gestures and social objects have rich meanings more than the physical. – Interaction between actor and the world – A view of both the actor and the world – Actor’s ability to interpret the social world
INTERACTIONIST PERSPECTIVE █ Tattoos █ Rituals █ Objects █ Dance █ Music
You are telling someone that they resemble a similarly shaped part of the human body and, by extension, that they are homosexual.
Module 3 INTERACTIONIST PERSPECTIVE Erving Goffman (1922 -1982) █ People behave as if they are in theater. (Drama) █ Attempt of an individual to mask his/her real persona and instead control other people’s impression on him/her by changing his setting, appearance, and manner. █
THE _____ APPROACH █ █ Sociologists need to gain broadest understanding of society by drawing on all major perspectives, noting where they overlap or diverge. Researcher’s work always guided by his or her theoretical viewpoint.
SPORTS Functionalist Perspective ü Sports socialize young people into values such as competition, camaraderie, and solidarity. ü ü Sports help maintain wellness. Sports bring members of a community and promote an overall feeling of unity and solidarity. ü Undoukai promotes community participation in Japan. ü Undoukai emphasizes group rather than individual effort.
CONFLICT PERSPECTIVE Sports are a form of big business in which profits are more important. Sports perpetuate the false idea that success can be achieved simply through hard work, while failure should be blamed to the individual alone. In Olympics, poor countries will less likely win.
INTERACTIONISTS PERSPECTIVE Sports facilitate parent-child involvement It can promote friendship networks There are different roles (coaches, players, etc. ) Social behavior is affected by norms, values, and demands of the social world of sports.
FEMINIST PERSPECTIVE Excessive dieting Gender stratification in sports
SUMMARY Functionalist perspective– emphasizes the way in which p___ts of a society are structured to maintain its _______. Conflict perspective- assumes that social be____ is best understood in terms of c______ or t______ between competing groups (men vs. women, young vs. old, rich vs. poor, white vs. dark) Interactionist- concerned primarily with fundamental or everyday forms of interaction, including symbols and other types of non verbal communication, even material culture.
THEORIST Who is the father of Sociology?
CONCEPT An awareness of the relationship between an individual and the society both in the present and in the past.
THEORY According to this theory, self identity construction is based on how others view the individual. What do you call this theory?
PERSPECTIVE Sociologists in this particular perspective examine gestures and symbols and they believe that social objects have rich meanings more than the physical.
CONCEPT It is the study of social groups, organization, and social interaction.
THEORIST He was the first black American to obtain a PHD degree from Harvard University.
PERSPECTIVE This sociological perspective espouses the idea that sociologists need to gain broadest understanding of society by drawing on all major perspectives, noting where they overlap or diverge.
THEORIST He developed a theoretical understanding of racial inequality.
THEORIST He coined the term “sociology. ”
THEORIST He popularized the "survival of the fittest” in society.
CONCEPT One purpose of education is to help students acquire the skills they need to be successful in society. A. Manifest Function B. Latent Function
THEORIST He is regarded as the founder of interactionist perspective.
CONCEPT It is a process of questioning actions and ideas that are usually taken for granted.
CONCEPT It is the systematic study of how society is organized and how we experience life.
CONCEPT Sociology also examines the impacts of _____ on people’s attitude and behavior.
THEORIST According to this theorist, to comprehend behavior, one must learn subjective meaning people attach to actions.
CONCEPT It is a kind of science that deals with the social features of humans and the ways they interact and change.
PERSPECTIVE A sociological perspective that also focuses on one-on-one, face-to-face interaction.
CONCEPT Sociologists are interested in seeing the strange in the ____?
THEORIST Proponent of the manifest and latent functions and sociology of deviance.
PERSPECTIVE This sociological perspective assumes that social behavior best understood in terms of tension or conflict between competing groups.
PERSPECTIVE A sociological perspective that viewed society as vast network of connected parts.
THEORIST He maintained that capital sustains individuals and families from one generation to the next.
THEORIST Society is divided between two classes that clash in pursuit of interests.
CONCEPT These are social structures or mechanism that promote social order and cooperation influencing group behavior.
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By Angi Becker Stevens
Published August 5, 2013 12:00AM (EDT)
My family is very ordinary to me. We eat dinner together. We gather in the living room and watch movies. Last weekend, we went on a camping trip and sat around the campfire making s’mores, the grown-ups enjoying a few beers while my 9-year-old daughter challenged us with endless rounds of “would you rather?” It all feels so wonderfully mundane that sometimes I have to remind myself that most people view us as strange at best, depraved at worst.
I’m polyamorous, which means I believe you can love multiple partners at the same time. I’m in a relationship with my husband of nearly 17 years, and my boyfriend, with whom I celebrated my second anniversary in May. (In polyamorous lingo, our relationship is known as a “V”; I’m the “hinge” of the V and my two partners are the vertices.) People often say our lives sound complicated, but the truth is, we’re quite harmonious. We often joke that we’d make incredibly boring subjects for reality TV.
That hasn’t kept the world at large from condemning us. The right has spent years warning that we are the travesty waiting down the slippery slope of same-sex marriage. With every stride forward for marriage equality, I can count on turning on the TV to find conservative talking heads lumping families like mine in with pedophilia and bestiality. But liberals, for the most part, don’t treat us much better. They’re quick to insist that same-sex marriage would never, ever lead to such awful things -- failing to point out how multi-partner relationships between consenting adults do not exactly belong in the same category as “relationships” with children or goats.
Even people who don’t vilify us still have a great deal of misconception. Aren’t you just “having your cake and eating it too,” they ask me? Isn’t this unfair to the men? Doesn’t this hurt your daughter? The confusion is understandable. Many people have never seen a polyamorous family like ours before. So let me explain how it works -- or, at least, how it works for us.
My path here was a long one. As far back as I can remember, I felt that loving one person romantically did not preclude the possibility of loving another at the same time. It seemed natural and intuitive to me. But I had no models for that way of living, so I assumed there was something wrong with me.
I married my husband and remained in a monogamous relationship with him for many years. I knew I wanted to be with him for the long haul. But I was never entirely fulfilled. I couldn’t shake the feeling that some part of me was repressed.
When I learned about polyamorous relationships, I knew that’s what I wanted. My husband wasn’t so sure, though. It sounded fine for other people, but just not him. And it still seemed unrealistic to me, so I never pressed the issue.
When I returned to school to finish my bachelor’s degree in my late 20s, I became friends with a man who changed my mind about all that. He believed in polyamory, too, and we had long conversations about it together: how it could work, how it was truly possible.
One night, I sat down with my husband and spilled everything. I told him that being polyamorous was a part of who I am, and I asked if he would at least do some research and give it serious consideration before dismissing the idea. He understood that I never would have asked this if it hadn’t been extremely important.
That conversation could have ended our marriage. But instead, our journey into non-monogamy began.
One of the biggest hurdles in non-monogamy -- probably the hurdle -- is jealousy. My husband was an incredibly jealous person back then, but he began to question its usefulness and purpose. Jealousy is born from a fear of losing a partner; if you believe that love and intimacy can be shared, and are not diminished by sharing, then that fear loses a lot of its power. It was liberating for my husband to step outside of the box that saw everyone else as some kind of threat.
Once he became comfortable with the idea, I began dating my friend from school. Those early days were not without challenges. Choosing to be polyamorous doesn’t mean you instantly flip a switch that extinguishes all jealousy. But it does mean that we seek to understand why we’re feeling insecure. Rather than saying, “You can’t do this with this other person,” we try to pinpoint what’s missing from our own relationship. We say things like, “I’m having a hard time, and I could really use some quality one-on-one time with you right now.” Being able to ask for what you need — rather than direct negativity at a partner’s other relationship — is vital in a polyamorous relationship. Opening ourselves up in this way was a revelation for my husband and me. We became more connected with each other than we’d been in years.
That first romantic relationship of mine only lasted 10 months (though he remains one of my closest friends). Afterward, I didn’t actively seek another partner. I was hurting from the breakup and not in any rush to put my feelings on the line again. Still, I was happy knowing I had that freedom when the right person came along.
Eventually, he did. My boyfriend and I met through our leftist politics. We were members of the same organization. We built a friendship over a period of months, often sitting up talking until sunrise on my back porch. He hadn’t been familiar with polyamory before, though he said the idea made sense to him immediately. I knew I was falling for him, and suspected he felt the same, but I was uncertain whether he would want to be in a polyamorous relationship. After we finally kissed for the first time, I forced myself to have an upfront conversation. Because polyamory don’t rely on familiar social scripts, it’s crucial to spell out terms and expectations rather than relying on assumptions. I needed him to know I wanted a real relationship, not something casual on the side. He told me he wanted exactly the same thing.
From the beginning, I was aware that this relationship was different from my previous one. My boyfriend introduced me to his family, something my ex had never done. We spent a great deal of time together, and within months I knew I was falling in love. I hadn’t experienced that kind of emotional intensity since my husband and I were teenagers. Feeling that same surge so many years later made me freshly aware that my husband was the only other person I had really ever been in love with before.
My husband liked my boyfriend a great deal. He had even encouraged me many times to “go for it” in the preceding months. Still, it was an adjustment to watch me develop such deep feelings for someone else. And he was somewhat surprised to find himself struggling with his feelings over this. (Hadn’t he slayed that green-eyed monster with the last relationship?) But this was another learning experience: Every relationship is different, and presents a new set of challenges. With time, and plenty of talking, I was able to give my husband the reassurance he needed. This wasn’t a threat to our relationship. If anything, I loved him more than ever.
At the same time as I was trying to help my husband feel secure, I was also fearful about the future with my boyfriend. As the months went on, and I began to envision a lasting relationship with him, I worried constantly that he would leave me for a “normal” life. He never expressed any jealousy over my relationship with my husband, but I knew it was frustrating for him that I wasn’t freely available to leave my family and spend time together on a whim, and I felt guilty for the unavoidable limitations placed on us. But my boyfriend made it clear to me that he did see a future with me.
A year ago, my husband and I started looking to buy our first home, and we did so with the full intention that my boyfriend would come live with us. When we first embarked on living polyamorously, I hadn’t imagined meshing our worlds so fully. But it became increasingly clear doing so made sense for all of us.
This past year has been a gradual transition. My boyfriend is at our house about half the week, and will be moving in full-time when his current lease is up, just weeks from now. All three of us had some apprehensions about sharing the space. But this slow adjustment has given us a chance to see firsthand how well it works, and none of us has concerns anymore.
Like any relationship, both of mine occasionally have conflict. But at this stage, that conflict isn’t related to the fact that there are three of us. I have the same kinds of spats and disagreements with each of my partners that monogamous folks have: I’m sensitive and get my feelings hurt; stress makes one of us snippy; we have those absurd fights that start over nothing.
Sometimes, having limited time with each of them does create more tension. I have higher expectations for the time we’re going to spend together, and sometimes those high expectations cause me disappointment. But that’s less and less of a problem as we blend our lives together under one roof, and I no longer feel that my time is so divided between them.
Last weekend, as the three of us were sitting around the campfire, after my daughter had gone to sleep, the conversation turned to the impending move-in, and how ready we all feel to take that step.
“It just feels right,” my husband said to my boyfriend, and I just sat back and smiled.
Of course, one of the most common questions I get is about children. Isn’t a family like ours a harmful environment for kids? My daughter, who will be 10 next
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Wife S And Two


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