8.4 Marriage and Family
In a basic biological sense, women give birth, and the minimal family unit in most, though not all, societies is mother and child. Cultures elaborate on that basic relationship and build on it to create units that are culturally considered central to social life. Families grow through the birth or adoption of children and through new adult relationships often recognized as marriage. In the United States, it is only culturally acceptable to be married to one spouse at a time or to a succession of spouses one after the other. This practice is sometimes called serial monogamy, which is reinforced by religious systems and by law. Plural marriages are not allowed; they are illegal although they do exist because they are encouraged under some religions or ideologies. In the United States, couples are legally allowed to divorce and remarry, but not all religious and cultural groups support this practice.
When anthropologists talk of family structures, we distinguish among several standard family types, any of which can be the typical or preferred family unit in a culture.
Key Terms in the Conversation about Family
- Nuclear family: parents who are in a culturally-recognized relationship, such as marriage, along with their minor or dependent children; also known as a conjugal family although non-conjugal nuclear families are possible
- a non-conjugal nuclear family might be a single parent with dependent children, due to the death of one spouse, or divorce, or the lack of a marriage in the first place
- Extended family: a family of at least three generations sharing a household
- A stem family is a version of an extended family that includes an older couple and one of their adult children with a spouse (or spouses) and children
- A joint family is a very large extended family that includes multiple generations.
- Polygamous families are based on plural marriages in which there are multiple wives or, in rarer cases, multiple husbands; they may live in nuclear or extended family households, and they may or may not be close to each other spatially.
- Blended families describe families that develop when adults who have been widowed or divorced marry again and bring children from previous partnerships together. These families are common in many countries with high divorce rates, like the United States.
In situations where one child in a family is designated to inherit, it is more likely that only the inheriting child will remain with the parents when they become an adult and marry. While this is often an oldest male, it is sometimes a different child. In Burma or Myanmar, for example, the youngest daughter was considered the ideal caretaker of elderly parents and was generally designated to inherit.[1] The other children will “marry out” or find other means to support themselves.
8.4.1 Who Can You Marry?
Cultural expectations define appropriate potential marriage partners. Cultural rules emphasizing the need to marry within a cultural group are known as endogamy. People are sometimes expected to marry within religious communities, to marry someone who is ethnically or racially similar or who comes from a similar economic or educational background. These are endogamous marriages: marriages within a group. Cultural expectations for marriage outside a particular group are called exogamy. Many cultures require that individuals marry only outside their own kinship groups, for instance. In the United States laws prevent marriage between close relatives such as first cousins. There was a time in the not-so-distant past, however, when it was culturally preferred for Europeans and Euro-Americans to marry first cousins. Royalty and aristocrats were known to betroth their children to relatives, often cousins. Charles Darwin, who was British, married his first cousin Emma.This was often done to keep property and wealth in the family.
In some societies, however, a cousin might be a preferred marriage partner. In some Middle Eastern societies, patrilateral cousin marriage – marrying a male or female cousin on your father’s side – is preferred. Some cultures prohibit marriage with a cousin who is in your lineage but prefer that you marry a cousin who is not in your lineage. For example, if you live in a society that traces kinship patri- lineally, cousins from your father’s brothers or sisters would be forbidden as marriage partners, but cousins from your mother’s brothers or sisters might be considered excellent marriage partners.
Arranged marriages were typical in many cultures around the world in the past, including the United States. Marriages are arranged by families for many reasons: because the families have some- thing in common, for financial reasons, in order to match people with others from the “correct” social, economic or religious group, and for many other reasons. In India today, some people practice a kind of modified arranged marriage practice that allows the potential spouses to meet and spend time together before agreeing to a match. The meeting may take place through a mutual friend, a family member, community matchmaker, or even a Marriage Meet, in which members of the same community (caste) are invited to gather (see Figure 5). Although arranged marriages still exist in urban cities such as Mumbai, love matches are increasingly common. In general, as long as the social requirements are met, love matches may be accepted by the families involved.
Polygamy refers to any marriage in which there are multiple partners. There are two kinds of polygamy: polygyny and polyandry. Polygyny refers to marriages in which there is one husband and multiple wives. In some societies that practice polygyny, the preference is for sororal polygyny, or the marriage of one man to several sisters. In such cases, it is sometimes believed that sisters will get along better as co-wives. Polyandry describes marriages with one wife and multiple husbands. As with polygyny, fraternal polyandry is common and involves the marriage of a woman to a group of brothers.
In some cultures, if a man’s wife dies, especially if he has no children or has young children, it is thought to be best for him to marry one of his deceased wife’s sisters. A sister, it is believed, is a rea- sonable substitution for the lost wife and likely a more loving mother to any children left behind. This practice might also prevent the need to return property exchanged at marriage, such as dowry (payments made to the groom’s family before marriage), or bridewealth (payments made to the bride’s family before marriage). The practice of a man marrying the sister of his deceased wife is called sororate marriage. In the case of a husband’s death, some societies prefer that a woman marry one of her husband’s brothers, and in some cases, this might be preferred even if he already has a wife. This practice is called levirate marriage. This latter practice is described in the Old Testament.[2]
Reflection: Who can you marry? Pick three cultures and share out their marriage rules. New and text ones work. Just don’t forget to cite.
8.4.2 Family Size
Cultural rules generally define not only who makes up a family but also how many people should be in it. In some cultures, larger families are considered ideal. In others, smaller families are preferred. These ideas are often linked to both practical and ideological considerations. Practical considerations might include the availability of housing, work patterns, childcare, the economic contribution children make to a family, or the cost of raising children. Ideological considerations include religious values related to families.
During the same period in the 1990s, it was common for families in the United States to say that the ideal family included two children and preferably one of each gender (anecdotal). This of course varies
based on factors which include, but are not limited to, the ethnicity and religion of the family. In another example, the People’s Republic of China had an official one-child policy.[3] A family that included only one child was not a widespread cultural ideal. Most families wished for more children but had to settle for less.
8.4.3 Families, Households, and Domestic Groups
A family can be defined as the smallest group of individuals who see themselves as connected to one another. They are usually part of larger kinship groups, but they may not interact on a daily basis with these groups. Families tend to reside together and share economic opportunities and other rights and responsibilities. Family rights and responsibilities are a significant part of understanding families and how they work. In the United States, for example, minor children have a right to be supported materially by their parents or other legal guardians. Parents have a responsibility to support and nurture their children. Spouses have a right to mutual support from each other, and property acquired during a marriage is considered “common property” in many U.S. states unless specified otherwise by a prenuptial agreement. Some family responsibilities are cultural and not legal. Many such responsibilities are reinforced by religious or other ideological notions.
Family members who reside together are called households. A household may include larger kinship groups who think of themselves as separate but related families. Households may also include non-fam- ily or kin members, or could even consist exclusively of non-related people who think of themselves as family. Many studies of families cross-culturally have focused on household groups because it is households that are the location for many of the day-to-day activities of a society. Households are important social units in any community.
Sometimes, families or households are spread across several residential units but think of themselves as a single group for many purposes. In Croatia, because of urban housing constraints, some extended family households operate across one or more residential spaces. An older couple and their married children might live in apartments near each other and cooperate on childcare and cooking as a single household unit. Domestic group is another term that can be used to describe a household. Domestic groups can describe any group of people who reside together and share activities pertaining to domestic life, including but not limited to childcare, elder care, cooking, and economic support, even if they might not describe themselves as “family.”
Households may include nuclear families, extended families, joint extended families, or even combinations of families that share a residence and other property as well as rights and responsibilities. In certain regions of Croatia, large agricultural households were incredibly numerous. I carried out research in a region known as Slavonia, which, from the seventeenth through the nineteenth centuries was near the border of the Austro-Hungarian and Ottoman Empires. Families in portions of this region were referred to as zadruzi (plural) or zadruga (singular). They sometimes numbered up to 100 members, all related through blood and marriage. But these households were much more than a nuclear or even a joint extended family. They were more like small towns with specialists within the household group who did things such as shoe horses or sew. These very large households supported a military culture where men between sixteen and sixty years old had to be ready for military service.[4] A Croatian anthropologist in the 1800s reported that one family was so large that an older woman died and this was not noticed for three days! The local government in this case forced the family to divide, separating their property and residing in smaller numbers.[5]
8.4.4. Creating Families: Patterns of Marriage
Most cultures have ideas about how marriages should be arranged (whether by families or by the individuals involved), at what age this should occur, what the married partners should have in common (including economic status, religion, ethnicity and so on), and what cultural, religious and legal processes make a marriage valid. In the United States, strong cultural norms suggest that individuals should marry for love and not for other reasons. It is not unusual, however, for communities to teach children to follow certain group norms in choosing a marriage partner. Some religious communities, for example, will not recognize marriages contracted across religious lines. Some families strongly prefer that their children marry individuals with similar economic, cultural, or ethnic backgrounds. Because families tend to socialize with other families similar to themselves, young people are more likely to meet others similar to themselves.
8.4.5 Marriage Exchanges: Dowry and Bridewealth
In many societies, marriages are affirmed with an exchange of property. This is usually the case in places where families have a hand in arranging a marriage. A property exchange recognizes the challenges faced by a family that loses a member and by a family that takes on a new member. These practices also reflect different notions about the value of the new family member.
Dowry payments are known from U.S. and Western European history. A dowry is a gift given by a bride’s family to either the bride or to the groom’s family at the time of the marriage. In societies that practice dowry, families often spend many years accumulating the gift. In some villages in the former Yugoslavia, the dowry was meant to provide for a woman if she became a widow. The dowry was her share of her family’s property and reflected the tradition that land was usually inherited by a woman’s brothers. The dowry might include coins, often woven together in a kind of apron and worn on her wedding day. This form of dowry also represented a statement of wealth, prestige or high status for both families: her family’s ability to give this kind of wealth, and the prestige of the family who was acquiring a desirable new bride. Her dowry also could include linens and other useful items to be used during her years as a wife. In more recent times, dowries have become extravagant, including things like refrigerators, cars, and houses.
A dowry can also represent the higher status of the groom’s family and its ability to demand a pay- ment for taking on the economic responsibility of a young wife. This way of thinking about dowry is more typical of societies in which women are less valued than men. A good dowry enables a woman’s family to marry into a better family. In parts of India, a dowry could sometimes be so large that it would be paid in installments. Bride burnings, killing a bride, could happen if her family did not continue to make the agreed-upon payments (though there may be other reasons for this awful crime in individual cases). This, of course, is illegal, but it does sometimes occur.[6]
Historically, dowry was most common in agricultural societies. Land was the most valuable commodity, and usually, land stayed in the hands of men. Women who did not marry were sometimes seen as a burden on their own families because they were not perceived as making an economic contribution, and they represented another mouth to feed. A dowry was important for a woman to take with her into a marriage because the groom’s family had the upper economic hand. It helped ease the tension of her arrival in the household, especially if the dowry was substantial.
Bridewealth, by contrast, often represents a higher value placed on women and their ability to work and produce children. Bridewealth is an exchange of valuables given from a man’s family to the family of his new wife. Bridewealth is common in pastoralist societies in which people make their living by raising domesticated animals. The Masaai are an example of one such group. A cattle-herding culture located in Kenya and Tanzania, the Maasai pay bridewealth based on the desirability of the woman. Culturally defined attributes such as her age, beauty, virginity, and her ability to work contribute to a woman’s value. The economic value placed on women does not mean that women in such societies necessarily have much freedom, but it does sometimes give them some leverage in their new domestic situations. In rare cases, there might be simultaneous exchanges of dowry and bridewealth. In such cases, often the bridewealth gift was more of a token than a substantial economic contribution.
8.4.6 Where do you live after Marriage?
Every culture has ideas about where a newly married couple should live. There are four main post-marital residency types- neolocal (new location), patrilocal (father’s location), matrilocal (mother’s location)/avunculocal (uncle’s location) and bilocal residence (two locations)/ambilocal residence (either location).
Neolocal
In the United States and in Western Europe, it is usually expected that a new couple create a new domestic unit or household. Ideally, they should live together in a place separate from either of their families of orientation: the families in which they were raised. They are expected to create a new family of procreation: a new household for raising children. The goal of most couples is to eventually live separately from their original families so that they can focus on their new relationship and be independent. This kind of residence after marriage is called neolocal residence (new location). Increasingly, many couples establish a residence together before marriage or may skip the formal marriage altogether.
Patrilocal
Another common pattern around the world is patrilocal residence (father’s location). This means that a couple generally resides with the husband’s father’s family after marriage. This is a multi-generational practice. The new husband’s own mother likely moved into the household when she married his father. Patrilocal residence is common around the world. It creates larger households that can be useful in farming economies. Today, with increasing urbanization and with the very different kinds of jobs associated with industrial capitalism, patrilocal residence has become less common.
Patrilocal residence is usually associated with patrilineal descent. Property, knowledge, and positions are inherited through the father’s family or the husband’s father’s family. In the case of patrilocal residence, it was sometimes difficult for a woman to return to her original family if her marriage ended due to death or divorce. The latter was often considered socially shaming, and in patrilineal societies women were often blamed for ending the marriage regardless of the actual circumstances.
Matrilocal (mother’s location) /Avunculocal (uncle’s location)
A less common pattern worldwide is matrilocal residence. In matrilocal residence societies, men leave their matrilineal families at marriage and move in with their wives’ mothers’ families. Matrilocal residence is usually associated with matrilineal descent. Property, knowledge, and positions are inherited through the mother’s family, or the wife’s mother’s family. Matrilineal and matrilocal societies tended to be less concerned with divorce. Men always had a home with their mothers, aunts, and sisters and might even come and go during a marriage, carrying out responsibilities to their maternal relatives and staying with them from time to time.
Quite a few Native American groups practiced matrilocal residence, including the Hopi and the Navajo (or Diné) in the Southwest, and the Haudenosaunee (or Iroquois) tribes in the Great Lakes region. A very interesting residence pattern found within matrilineal societies is avunculocal residence (uncle’s location). It means that a couple will live with the wife’s mother’s brother. In matrilineal societies, in which important property, knowledge, or social position are linked with men, the preference is to keep wealth within the matrilineal household. Property and other cultural items are passed not from biological fathers to sons, but from maternal uncles to nephews. In doing so, property is kept within the matriline.
An excellent example of avunculocal residence is found in the Trobriand Islands in Papua New Guinea. In families where there was a position of authority or significant wealth, it was common for a young man to go live with or near his mother’s brother at the time of his marriage. Trobriand Islanders passed important magical knowledge and political positions through the mother’s lineage. The son of a chief would not become a chief. Instead, the chief’s maternal nephew would inherit the position. Tro briand kinship and family life is rich and complicated. Anthropologist Annette Weiner describes men and women as carrying out complementary roles, and both men and women are valued culturally. This is not a matriarchy, nor is it a true patriarchy.
The avunculocal arrangement is so important that a man or woman without a cross-gender sibling will adopt one. A woman must have a brother to plant yam gardens for her husband when she marries. A man must have a sister to participate in exchanges of women’s wealth on his behalf to enhance his position and to ensure that his soul is eventually reborn, after death, into the matrilineage. Family life and the passing of knowledge were changing rapidly in the Trobriand Islands at the end of Weiner’s work; more people were converting to Christianity, and while belief in magic was not yet disappear- ing, Christians could not inherit their uncles’ magic. This is an example of a culture in transition. At the
same time, however, Trobriand Islanders valued their traditions, culture, and language, and were loathe to lose them altogether.[7]
Explaining the differences between patrilocal and matrilocal residences risks stereotyping. That said, it is likely that those cultures in which women marry “out” are less likely to value women while those in which men leave their families at marriage are more inclusive of women. This may have something to do with economics and ideologies but must be examined in each cultural context.
Bilocal/Ambilocal
Bilocal residence (two locations) or ambilocal residence (either location) represent two additional and related residential patterns. They are essentially the same and mean that a couple may live with or near either the husband’s or wife’s family after marriage. A striking example comes from the island of Dobu, a place that is not far from the Trobriand Islands in Papua New Guinea. In Dobu society, which was traditionally matrilineal and practiced village exogamy, a married couple would alternate years liv-
ing in the husband’s village and in the wife’s village.[8] In cases of bilocal or ambilocal residence, while a
couple has the choice to live with either the husband’s or wife’s family, a choice is made based on which location is best able to accommodate new members or which location needs the additional labor that comes from new members. Once the choice of residence is made, the married couple usually remains in one place.
8.4.7 Inheritance
The inheritance of family property is often a part of cultural values and roles for families. In 1991, when Croatia was on the verge of war, I remember a woman speaking about her house going to her eldest son. Her young daughter was sitting with us at the time and said to her mother in surprise, “Mama, why not me?” Her mother stroked her head and smiled at her, but was firm when she said “Because you are female.” It is typical worldwide, particularly in agricultural societies, for men to inherit family property. The best-known pattern is inheritance by the oldest male. Joint inheritance by brothers, with the oldest brother nominally in charge of the family, is also fairly widespread in joint and extended families. As mentioned above, however, other patterns are found, including property that passes from maternal uncle to maternal nephew in the Trobriand Islands, and inheritance of the family house and corresponding responsibility to care for the older generation by the youngest daughter in Burmese families. This is a further reminder that family organization and expectations are linked to economic systems and to the resources available to the family. Patterns of family life and marriage do not exist apart from the physical and economic environment, and other cultural practices.
8.4.8 Same-Sex Marriage
In the United States and Canada, as well as other countries, two individuals of the same sex may be legally married, but in these countries as well as other places, same-sex couples have been creating households and families for centuries, long before legal recognition. Same-sex marriages are documented, for instance, in the history of Native American groups from the Great Plains. On the Plains, men who preferred to dress and take on the roles of women were allowed to marry other men. It was assumed that if one partner gathered plant food and prepared food, the other partner should have a complementary role like hunting. Androgynous individuals, males who preferred female roles or dress, and females who took on male roles were not condemned but regarded as “two-spirits,” a label that had positive connotations. Two-spirits were considered to embody a third gender combining elements of both male and female. The key to the two-spirit gender identity was behavior: what individuals did in their communities.[9] If a person who was born with a male biological sex felt his identity and chosen lifestyle best matched the social role recognized as female, he could move into a third-gender two-spirit category. Today, Native American groups set their own laws regarding same-sex marriage. Many recognize two-spirit individuals and accept the marriage of a two-spirit person to a person of the same biological sex. Although some nations still do not permit same-sex marriage between tribal members, one of the largest tribal nations, the Cherokee, legalized same-sex marriages in 2016.
8.4.9 Adoption
Adoption is another way that people form family ties. In the United States, usually it is infants or minor children who are adopted by a non-parental family member like a grandparent, an aunt or uncle, or an older sibling, or by a non-family member. This is usually done when a biological parent is unable or unwilling to raise a child. The decision to give up a child through adoption is a complicated one, and one that parents do not make easily.
In other societies, adoption is viewed differently. In some Pacific Island societies, children who are adopted are considered fortunate because they have two sets of parents; children are not given for adoption because a parent is unwilling or unable to care for them, but rather to honor the adoptive parents. Martha Ward described a young woman in Pohnpei, Micronesia who had a child for her grandmother to keep her company in her older years. In another case, she described a child who went to dinner at a relative’s house and stayed for a number of years in a kind of adoptive situation. In such cases, children retain relationships with biological and adoptive family members and may even move fluidly between them.17
One of the more unusual forms of adoption is adopted-daughter marriage, or sim pua marriage. It is found in Taiwan and described by anthropologist Margery Wolf. Wolf worked in Taiwan in the mid-1900s. At that time, Taiwanese families strongly preferred sons over daughters. Sons stayed with their families in adulthood, produced the next generation, cared for parents in old age, and carried on the tradition of ancestor veneration so that one would not become a “wandering ghost” after death. Daughters were regarded as expensive. People believed that they raised daughters for someone else. Dowries and weddings for grown daughters were expensive. Families worried that they would not be able to find suitable husbands for their grown daughters. They would remain a burden on their natal families in their later years, not producers of children or contributors in any other way.[10]As a result, a custom developed of giving up daughters to other families as future daughters-in-law. Mothers would give up their daughters as infants, only to take in very quickly an adopted daughter from someone else. Sometimes, the future wife was adopted before the family had a son. It was said that an adopted daughter/daughter-in-law would “lead in a son.” Adopted daughters were reportedly not treated well. They had to do housework, help with childcare, and were not given any privileges such as education. They were often older than their eventual husbands and had a lower status in the family than their adoptive brothers. There were reports of an adopted daughter being treated badly by adopted siblings and then being expected to later marry one of them. Wolf reports a very low birth rate among couples who were raised as siblings. Pressure to engage in these kinds of adoptions usually came from a mother-in-law, or the husband’s mother, or a grandmother of the infant girl who had decision-making power in the family because she was the mother of an adult son. Grandmothers saw this kind of arrangement as advantageous to the family, according to Wolf, because birth mothers were more likely to be unhappy about losing a baby daughter and because caring for another child brought in a future daughter-in-law.[11]
Quick Reading Check: Create an anthropological definition of marriage using your own words. How does this compare to the definition of marriage you have been using as a layperson?
Media Attributions
- Marriage meet poster © Laura Tubelle de González is licensed under a All Rights Reserved license
- Melford Spiro, Kinship and Marriage in Burma: A Cultural and Psychodynamic Analysis (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1977). ↵
- Laura Tubelle de González, “Modern Arranged Marriage in Mumbai” Teaching Anthropology: SACC Notes 19 (2015). http://sacc-dev.americananthro.org/wp-content/uploads/TASN-191-192-spring-fall-20131.pdf. ↵
- The one-child policy was introduced in 1979. It was phased out beginning in 2015 and was replaced by a two-child policy. ↵
- see Vera St. Ehrlich, Family in Transition: A Study of 300 Yugoslav Villages. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1966. ↵
- Luka Lukic, Varos: Zbornik za narodi zivot i obicaje muznih slavena. Jugoslavenska akademija znanosti i umjet- nosti. Zagreb. god. 24, str. 32.238, 1919. ↵
- There are many news reports about this practice. See, for instance, Subodh Varnal, “Dowry Death: One Bride Burnt Every Hour,” The Times of India, January 27, 2012 http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/Dowry- death-One-bride-burnt-every-hour/article show/11644691.cms ↵
- Annette B. Weiner, The Trobrianders of Papua New Guinea (New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1988). ↵
- Reo Fortune, Sorcerers of Dobu (New York: E.P. Dutton and Co., 1932). ↵
- See, for instance, Will Roscoe, Changing Ones: Third and Fourth Genders in Native North America (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 1998). ↵
- Margery Wolf, Women and the Family in Rural Taiwan (Palo Alto, CA: Stanford University Press, 1972). ↵
- Ibid. ↵
marriage to a succession of spouses, one after the other.
a parent or parents who are in a culturally-recognized relationship, such as marriage, along with minor or dependent children.
a family of at least three-generations sharing a household.
a version of an extended family that includes an older couple and one of their adult children with a spouse (or spouses) and children.
a very large extended family that includes multiple generations.
families based on plural marriages in which there are multiple wives or, in rarer cases, multiple husbands.
a term describing expectations that individuals must marry within a particular group.
a term describing expectations that individuals must marry outside a particular group.
the practice of marrying a male or female cousin on the father’s side of the family.
marriages in which there is one husband and multiple wives.
marriages with one wife and multiple husbands.
payments made to the groom’s family by the bride’s family before marriage.
payments made to the bride’s family by the groom’s family before marriage.
the practice of a man marrying the sister of his deceased wife.
the practice of a woman marrying one of her deceased husband’s brothers.
the smallest group of individuals who see themselves as connected to one another.
family members who reside together.
a term that can be used to describe a group of people who live together even if mem- bers do not consider themselves to be family
the family in which an individual is raised.
a new household formed for the purpose of conceiving and raising children.
newly married individuals establish a household separate from other family members.
married individuals live with or near the husband’s father’s family.
married individuals live with or near the wife’s mother’s family.
married individuals live with or near an uncle.