Family, Gender and Kinship in Australia: The Social and Cultural Logic of Practice and SubjectivityThis ethnographically-based exploration draws on sociological, historical and demographic data to provide a comprehensive analysis of family, gender and kinship in Australia, which informs modern kinship and gender at large. Allon Uhlmann charts the cultural basis that underlies kinship practices and argues that the Australian family is characterized by deep cultural and social continuities rather than the common view that the family is undergoing substantial change. He further shows how the modern family both shapes, and is shaped by, broad social and economic processes. This analysis provides greater insight into this critical field of practice as well as showcasing a novel analytical approach to practice that is rooted in the sociology of practice and in the anthropology of cognition. The book also suggests changes to the way in which social scientists currently treat family and kinship. |
Contents
Historical Continuity and the Myth of Crisis | |
The Doxic Family | |
Doxa Orthodoxy and Heterodoxy | |
Structural Aspects of Kinship | |
Internalized Gender Structures | |
Family and Gender and Society at Large | |
Some Theoretical and Methodological Elaborations | |
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Common terms and phrases
adults analysis Anglo-Celtic Australian arrangement aspects Australian family body Bourdieu breastfeeding cent chapter child cognitive construction contexts couple cultural capital distinction division of labour domestic domain dominant fraction doxic economic elite emerged example fact facto families of origin family household family practices father female feminine Fergie field of kinship Game and Pringle gender order gender style gendered division genderedness grandparents habitus heterodox homology homosexual family image schema increase informants instance kinship and family kinship terminology labour market labour power Lakoff larrikin living logic male Margaret marriage married masculine masculine domination mateship men’s metaphor mother networks Newcastle normally Novocastrians nuclear family nuclear-family household one’s organized parenthood parents participation person perspective prototypical family rates realized category Reiger relatedness relations relationships relatives role Ruth sexual single-parent families Snooks social agents social capital social reproduction social structure society spouses Stivens trajectory Vaus woman women workers working-class young