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MA II (MCC-MEA) 2014-2015 English Language and Linguistics

This course explores the central role of family in popular culture, analyzing how notions of family are circulated and reproduced. It examines popular TV shows such as The Addams Family, Little House on the Prairie, The Cosby Show, and more, to understand how the concept of family has evolved over time. The course also discusses the British Royal Family and the definition of family according to various sources. Through lectures and discussions, students will critically engage with the topic and consider the changing traditions and definitions of family in society.

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MA II (MCC-MEA) 2014-2015 English Language and Linguistics

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  1. MA II (MCC-MEA)2014-2015English Language and Linguistics

  2. THE COURSE“The Family in Popular Culture and Public Debate from the 1950s on”

  3. How central is the notion of family to our popular culture?How are notions of family circulated and reproduced? What is a family?

  4. The Addams Family(1964-66)

  5. Little House on the Prairie(1974-82)

  6. The Cosby Show(1984-1992)

  7. 7th Heaven(1996-2007)

  8. The Sopranos(1999-2007)

  9. Gilmore Girls (2000-2007)

  10. Modern Family (2009--)

  11. The Simpsons (1989--)

  12. Family Guy (1999-2003) (2005--)

  13. Shameless [USA] (2011--)

  14. Shameless [UK] (2004-2013)

  15. The New Normal (2012-13)

  16. The most popular Italian TV family?

  17. I Cesaroni

  18. Food for thought: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O_Ul32L5B34 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VtZJypa3Gsg

  19. The British Royal Family

  20. Reproducing the past?

  21. Or changing traditions?

  22. The First Family in the USA

  23. What is a family? Working toward a definition…

  24. FAMILY Definitions from the Merriam-Webster Dictionary: 1) : a group of individuals living under one roof and usually under one head : household

  25. 2) a : a group of persons of common ancestry : clan b : a people or group of peoples regarded as deriving from a common stock : race

  26. 3) a : a group of people united by certain convictions or a common affiliation: fellowship b : the staff of a high official (as the President)

  27. 4) a group of things related by common characteristics: as a : a closely related series of elements or chemical compounds b : a group of soils with similar chemical and physical properties (as texture, pH, and mineral content) that comprise a category ranking above the series and below the subgroup in soil classification c : a group of related languages descended from a single ancestral language

  28. 5) a : the basic unit in society traditionally consisting of two parents rearing their children; also : any of various social units differing from but regarded as equivalent to the traditional family <a single-parent family> b : spouse and children <want to spend more time with my family>

  29. Middle English familie, from Latin familia household (including servants as well as kin of the householder), from famulus servant First Known Use: 15th century

  30. It is worth noting that the word family originally meant a band of slaves. Even after the word came to apply to people affiliated by blood and marriage, for many centuries the notion of family referred to authority relations rather than love ones. The sentimentalization of family life and female nurturing was historically and functionally linked to the emergence of competitive individualism and formal egalitarianism for men. Stephanie Coontz, (2000)The Way We Never Were, pp. 43-44

  31. “A family is a group of two people or more (one of whom is the householder) related by birth, marriage, or adoption and residing together; all such people (including related subfamily members) are considered as members of one family. (…) The number of families is equal to the number of family households, however, the count of family members differs from the count of family household members because family household members include any non-relatives living in the household.” (Census Bureau, USA)

  32. The definiton of family used by the Census Bureau (“two or more persons related by birth, marriage or adoption who reside in the same household”) was selected by only 22 percent of a random sample of 1,200 adults in a 1990 survey conducted by Massachusetts Mutual Insurance Company. (source: Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Trinity University, San Antonio, TX)

  33. Should the word be defined in terms of: • those who live under the same roof, which basically means any household qualifies? • the functions it performs? • legal recognitions of the relationships?

  34. George Peter Murdock (1897-1985)  in his book Social Structure (1949) presented the family structure as a cultural universal. He had studied 250 societies, from small hunting communities to industrial societies, and found that family, which he defined as a social group that lives together, is a unit present across cultures.

  35. Murdock identidied four significant functions performed by families across the world: • Sexual • Economic • Reproductive • Educational

  36. Sexual function: the regulation of sexual activity of society’s adult members. Husbands and wives have sexual access to each other. All societies have norms regulating sexual activity outside marriage. The family caters to the sexual needs of its adult members and limits sexual access of other members of the society, thereby maintaining stability.

  37. Economic function: a division of labor along gender lines. Murdock considers this division of labor as rewarding for the spouses. It strenghtens the bond between them, as they are perceived and perceive themselves as doing distinct but complementary work.

  38. Reproductive function:  the family has the function of bearing and raising children. It provides the society with new members and assumes responsibility for raising them.

  39. Educational/Socialization function: the transmission of a society’s way of life, norms, and values to the younger members. This is a crucial function: Murdock argues that without culture, the society could not survive, and too much deviation from the norm would disrupt the stability of the society.

  40. Do you think Murdock’s definition of family and its universality are (still) valid? Can you think of any criticism you would level at that definition of family?

  41. when you claim something to be universal, it only needs one exception to prove it false. • Ex.: Nayar women in India. They were married to a man before puberty. After 3 days they could have virtually no other contact with said husband. They moved on to being “mothers” and in this new status they could take up to 12 husbands who visited them one at a time at night. (Kethleen Gough)

  42. Food for thought: The Mosuo women https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mosuo_women

  43. 2) Murdock’s model reads other cultures through the lens of our western culture. Ex.: some groups he would not recognize as families could very well be considered as such within a certain culture.

  44. 3) This vision of the family is quite idealised. Ex.: there are many families lacking one or more of the traits Murdock identifies as defining charactertistics of a family: single parents families, childless couples, orphan siblings, etc.

  45. 4) Some of the functions Murdock attributes to the family can be performed by other subjects in society as well. Ex.: the socialization of children is not a process carried out exclusively within the family; financial support can also come to children from subjects outside the family (institutions, government, etc.); sexual needs can be legitimately met poutside the family as well

  46. How does the changing role of women influence the definiton of family? • Working mothers • Housewives • Childcare • Education • Peternal role • …

  47. Food for thought: http://eige.europa.eu/content/gender-equality-index#/

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