Download Ebook Unhitched: Love, Marriage, and Family Values from West Hollywood to Western China (NYU Series in Social and Cultural Analysis), by Judith
Reading Unhitched: Love, Marriage, And Family Values From West Hollywood To Western China (NYU Series In Social And Cultural Analysis), By Judith is a really useful passion and doing that could be gone through at any time. It suggests that reviewing a book will certainly not limit your task, will not require the moment to invest over, and will not spend much money. It is an extremely budget friendly as well as reachable thing to acquire Unhitched: Love, Marriage, And Family Values From West Hollywood To Western China (NYU Series In Social And Cultural Analysis), By Judith Yet, keeping that very low-cost thing, you can get something brand-new, Unhitched: Love, Marriage, And Family Values From West Hollywood To Western China (NYU Series In Social And Cultural Analysis), By Judith something that you never ever do and also get in your life.
Unhitched: Love, Marriage, and Family Values from West Hollywood to Western China (NYU Series in Social and Cultural Analysis), by Judith
Download Ebook Unhitched: Love, Marriage, and Family Values from West Hollywood to Western China (NYU Series in Social and Cultural Analysis), by Judith
Unhitched: Love, Marriage, And Family Values From West Hollywood To Western China (NYU Series In Social And Cultural Analysis), By Judith. Negotiating with reviewing practice is no demand. Reading Unhitched: Love, Marriage, And Family Values From West Hollywood To Western China (NYU Series In Social And Cultural Analysis), By Judith is not sort of something sold that you can take or otherwise. It is a point that will certainly alter your life to life a lot better. It is the many things that will give you numerous points all over the world and also this cosmos, in the real world as well as here after. As what will certainly be provided by this Unhitched: Love, Marriage, And Family Values From West Hollywood To Western China (NYU Series In Social And Cultural Analysis), By Judith, just how can you haggle with the important things that has lots of benefits for you?
As recognized, lots of people say that books are the vinyl windows for the world. It doesn't suggest that buying publication Unhitched: Love, Marriage, And Family Values From West Hollywood To Western China (NYU Series In Social And Cultural Analysis), By Judith will imply that you can buy this globe. Just for joke! Reading a publication Unhitched: Love, Marriage, And Family Values From West Hollywood To Western China (NYU Series In Social And Cultural Analysis), By Judith will opened someone to assume better, to maintain smile, to amuse themselves, as well as to encourage the knowledge. Every book also has their unique to affect the visitor. Have you recognized why you read this Unhitched: Love, Marriage, And Family Values From West Hollywood To Western China (NYU Series In Social And Cultural Analysis), By Judith for?
Well, still perplexed of ways to get this publication Unhitched: Love, Marriage, And Family Values From West Hollywood To Western China (NYU Series In Social And Cultural Analysis), By Judith below without going outside? Just link your computer or gadget to the website as well as begin downloading and install Unhitched: Love, Marriage, And Family Values From West Hollywood To Western China (NYU Series In Social And Cultural Analysis), By Judith Where? This web page will show you the link page to download and install Unhitched: Love, Marriage, And Family Values From West Hollywood To Western China (NYU Series In Social And Cultural Analysis), By Judith You never stress, your preferred publication will certainly be sooner your own now. It will certainly be a lot easier to delight in reviewing Unhitched: Love, Marriage, And Family Values From West Hollywood To Western China (NYU Series In Social And Cultural Analysis), By Judith by on-line or getting the soft file on your gizmo. It will no concern who you are and what you are. This book Unhitched: Love, Marriage, And Family Values From West Hollywood To Western China (NYU Series In Social And Cultural Analysis), By Judith is composed for public and you are among them which can delight in reading of this e-book Unhitched: Love, Marriage, And Family Values From West Hollywood To Western China (NYU Series In Social And Cultural Analysis), By Judith
Spending the leisure by checking out Unhitched: Love, Marriage, And Family Values From West Hollywood To Western China (NYU Series In Social And Cultural Analysis), By Judith can offer such great encounter even you are only seating on your chair in the workplace or in your bed. It will not curse your time. This Unhitched: Love, Marriage, And Family Values From West Hollywood To Western China (NYU Series In Social And Cultural Analysis), By Judith will assist you to have more priceless time while taking remainder. It is quite enjoyable when at the twelve noon, with a mug of coffee or tea as well as a book Unhitched: Love, Marriage, And Family Values From West Hollywood To Western China (NYU Series In Social And Cultural Analysis), By Judith in your gizmo or computer system screen. By appreciating the sights around, below you can begin reading.
Judith Stacey, 2012 winner of the Simon and Gagnon Lifetime Achievement Award presented by the American Sociological Association. A leading expert on the family, Judith Stacey is known for her provocative research on mainstream issues. Finding herself impatient with increasingly calcified positions taken in the interminable wars over same-sex marriage, divorce, fatherlessness, marital fidelity, and the like, she struck out to profile unfamiliar cultures of contemporary love, marriage, and family values from around the world.
Built on bracing original research that spans gay men’s intimacies and parenting in America to plural and non-marital forms of family in South Africa and China, Unhitched decouples the taken for granted relationships between love, marriage, and parenthood. Countering the one-size-fits-all vision of family values, Stacey offers readers a lively, in-person introduction to these less familiar varieties of intimacy and family and to the social, political, and economic conditions that buttress and batter them. Through compelling stories of real families navigating inescapable personal and political trade-offs between desire and domesticity, the book undermines popular convictions about family, gender, and sexuality held on the left, right, and center. Taking on prejudices of both conservatives and feminists, Unhitched poses a powerful empirical challenge to the belief that the nuclear family—whether straight or gay—is the single, best way to meet our needs for intimacy and care. Stacey calls on citizens and policy-makers to make their peace with the fact that family diversity is here to stay.
- Sales Rank: #835746 in Books
- Published on: 2012-04-01
- Released on: 2012-04-01
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: 9.00" h x .72" w x 6.00" l, .85 pounds
- Binding: Paperback
- 304 pages
From Publishers Weekly
Stacey (In the Name of the Family), a professor of social and cultural analysis at New York University, spent over a decade interviewing and observing families in California, South Africa, and China for this scrupulously researched and moving portrait of family diversity across three continents and cultures. The first section is devoted to gay men living, loving, and parenting in tony West Hollywood. Stacey uses the experiences of her 50 subjects to examine both sides of the gay-marriage debate. The theory that legalizing gay marriage will lead to the legalization of polygamy takes Stacey to South Africa, where both same-sex and plural marriages are legal. She examines the history and modern interpretation of polygamy and asks if the practice might not offer some potential benefits to women and their children. Finally, Stacey turns her keen analysis on the Mosuo people of southwest China, who have rejected marriage for multigenerational households in which children are raised by their mothers and maternal family. Throughout her travels and exhaustive research, Stacey pokes and prods, and eagerly calls into question everything we think we know about love, marriage, and the baby in the baby carriage. Photos. (May)
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Review
"In her new book, Unhitched, Judith Stacey, a sociologist at NYU, surveys a variety of unconventional arrangements, from gay parenthood to polygamy to—in a mesmerizing case study—the Mosuo people of southwest China, who eschew marriage and visit their lovers only under cover of night."-Kate Bolick,The Atlantic
“Unhitched will enrage some readers and delight others, but anyone interested in contemporary debates about marriage, sexuality, and family life must read this richly detailed, rigorously argued book.”-Stephanie Coontz,author of Marriage, A History: How Love Conquered Marriage
“Throughout her travels and exhaustive research, Stacey pokes and prods, and eagerly calls into question everything we think we know about love, marriage, and the baby in the baby carriage.”-Publishers Weekly
"The richness of data, the detective-like quality of the prose, and its social and political relevance are sure to make Unhitched a provocative and invaluable contribution to the study of family and intimacy."-Kimberly D. Richman,American Journal of Sociology
"The book is thought provoking, engaging, and makes important contributions to the study of families."-Joya Misra,International Journal of Comparative Sociology
“With clear-cut, modern prose, (Stacey) infuses her commentary and details her investigation from all sides of the aisle with well-researched facts and figures… Clever and practical blend of research, history and anecdote.” -Kirkus Reviews
“Unhitched is Judith Stacey's richest and most provocative work to date. Tirelessly championing diverse varieties of intimate life, she has long refused to succumb to simplistic, homogenizing notions of ‘the family.’ Unhitched continues in this vein, bringing together a fascinating mix of ethnographic research on same-sex intimacies in this country, and plural and non-marital family forms in South Africa and China. It poses a powerful empirical challenge to the belief that the nuclear family—in both its hetero and homo variants—best fulfills our needs for intimacy and security."-Arlene Stein,author of The Stranger Next Door
"It doesn't simply offer a mind-bending cross-cultural perspective--you can find that in any Anthropology 101 textbook. Instead, Stacey uses her observations to underscore just how stifling and unstable the Western romantic ideal of marital monogamy can be for some people, as well as the vast array of romantic arrangements that are already out here in the world." -Salon.com
"It's admittedly hard to stop reading...if you're a people-watcher, are interested in culture and its changes, or have a deep interest in marriage rights one way or the other, this is one can't-miss book."-Terri Schlichenmeyer,The Los Angeles Times
"Unhitched thoughtfully explains how unconventional relationships can thrive across cultures with some intention and practice...The book says it's about love and marriage, but it's actually about parenthood and the myriad of ways a family can look to support raising children well." -Bitch Magazine
"Judith Stacey is a great writer, whose clear style and provocative arguments make her one of the most compelling and most engaging feminist writers of our time."-Social Forces
“Unhitched is a wild ride through the political and emotional worlds of family life. With a sociologist’s skill, Judith Stacey uncovers the very diverse shapes of human families; with a novelist’s skill, she tells us how they are lived. The disappointing options available to many women in a world of inequality appear; so do the creative responses. A lively and important book.”-Raewyn Connell,author of Gender: In World Perspective and Southern Theory
"The book will fuel the ongoing family values/marriage discourse by challenging conservatives, feminists, and proponents of same-sex marriage."-Marge Kappanadze,Library Journal
"The book is openly taking a strong normative stance against attempts at regulating the family."-Anca Gheaus,Metapsychology
“An engagingly written and highly readable book that deals with a crucial and controversial related set of issues: the nature of contemporary family life, kinship, love, parenting, intimacy, and how to live with diversity. No one is better qualified to take this on than Judith Stacey. She manages to combine the commitment of the serious ethnographer with the enthusiasm and insight of the eager traveler. This is an essential book.”-Jeffrey Weeks,author of The World We Have Won
"Stacey certainly makes a passionate case with a surprising amount of information on her side."-Anthropology Review Database
"Judith Stacey's Unhitched...successfully demystif[ies] aspects of modern marriage and its attendant real and imagined crises...[she] is a senior scholar on top of her game...her book makes you want to discuss her ideas with others."-Kristin Celello,Women's Review of Books
About the Author
Judith Stacey is Professor of Social and Cultural Analysis and Sociology at NYU. She is the author of numerous books and articles, including In the Name of the Family: Rethinking Family Values in the Postmodern Age (1996), Brave New Families: Stories of Domestic Upheaval in Late Twentieth-Century America (1990) and Patriarchy and Socialist Revolution in China (1983).
Most helpful customer reviews
15 of 18 people found the following review helpful.
a really invigorating take on "family values"
By Ashton Applewhite
UNHITCHED is an incredibly interesting book. An eminent family scholar, Stacey has already done much to debunk myths like the notion that that kids need both a mom and dad to turn out OK, or that marriage is an intrinsically superior framework for caring for those we love - or even a necessary one. She brings an open mind and rigorous scholarship to her nuanced, complex, taboo-ridden subject: the different forms that modern families take, and what works - or doesn't - for the people who belong to them.
Her approach in UNHITCHED is original and engaging: an ethnographic journey to three very different cultures - gay men in Los Angeles, diverse South African families with an emphasis on polygamy, and the Mosuo, a non-marrying tribe in China -- to investigate the tensions between desire and domesticity and the surprising forms that intimacy and commitment can assume. It's rigorously researched, but Stacey wears her scholarship lightly and writes with verve and wit.
There are plenty of surprises; Stacey isn't afraid to ask tough questions or to challenge conventional wisdom. UNHITCHED overturned many of my assumptions about monogamy, plural marriage, and gay fatherhood. I didn't know, for example, that gay men more readily adopt children of another race, class, ethnicity, and even health status (also true of their intimate relationships with adults). Stacey reconsiders polygyny, comparing the United States (where family law is rigid but social and economic opportunity relatively fluid) to South Africa (where the law is progressive but stark race and gender inequality persist). Describing polygyny as "a patriarchal bargain offered to and by men who are willing to accept social and economic responsibility for their sexual urges and privileges," Stacey bucks feminist doctrine to make the case that plural husbands, fathers, and lovers should be encouraged to stick around rather than driven underground. This deprives co-wives and kids of any rights or protection, she points out, and sometimes these arrangements are best for the women involved - even if it makes us uncomfortable.
On the other hand, what's not to like about the Mosuo, who have disentangled sex and romance from parental and economic obligations? The maternal homestead is the center of family life, where adults care for their kin. That's where men eat, live, and work, but at night they're free to visit any woman who desires them. Women can likewise pursue or refuse; no double standard. No squabbling with the in-laws, because mate choice has few implications for the family. No fatherlessness: all children born to the same Mosuo women are treated as full siblings. Marriage is not forbidden, but it is not the basis of kinship. On the other hand, as Stacey points out, this requires a high degree of cultural conformity and geographic immobility, but it sure has a lot to recommend it.
Tourism and capitalism are threatening this matrilineal society, so I was grateful to find out about the Mosuo - and to learn about all the other remarkable partnerships Stacey observed during her years of research for UNHITCHED. I came away with a lot of provocative ideas, and I like the view from here. Stacey's message is important: like it or not, family diversity is here to stay. There's no such thing as a "normal" family. No family form or sexual arrangement -- not monogamy, not promiscuity, not Ozzie and Harriet or Big Love -- is natural except variation. It's time to create policy that supports this diversity, and that means not privileging marriage. Whether or not you agree, UNHITCHED will give you a fresh perspective, and it's a very good read.
8 of 11 people found the following review helpful.
A lot of food for thought
By Elizabeth A. Root
Unhitched is a fascinating book, and I recommend it to anyone interested in various family structures, but I found it a bit overstated, ahistorical, and naive. I don't think that Judith Stacey proves what she thinks she proves, but the cases studies are fascinating and I love the different arrangements that people come to. I generally wish everyone happiness, and if it works for them, well, bless 'em.
Stacey, in expressing her contempt for our society's preference for monogamy, never looks backwards at history any earlier than her own childhood. A British family historian once commented that a frustration in his field was making people understand that nuclear families are traditional in that society from which our own largely developed. Most people think that a few generations ago, people routinely lived in multigenerational households, when in fact that was only as required by poverty or illness. That in itself limits how families can be structured. And as my sociology professor said, the pieces of a culture interlock, one cannot simply import random bits from here and there and have it work, but I am willing to try to integrate new ideas, as our culture has always done. Interesting though her case studies are, she needs a broader range of them, with statistical analysis, to truly support the positions that she takes, particularly since she has an obvious agenda. Furthermore, while I believe that people who are responsible, affectionate, and care about their relationships may structure idiosyncratic systems that work for them, I don't assume that people, as a whole, left to do whatever they like, are going to be any more caring and responsible than current monogamists. The bottom line for me is, are the kids being taken care of? I view legalizing gay marriage much more favorably than polygamy. I don't think that legalizing polygyny would have made Warren Jeffs a good person, or offered any protection to the women and children that he abused. I think that he wanted to exploit people, and legalizing polygyny wouldn't have stopped him anymore than it stops abusive monogamists. Polygyny wasn't the only illegal thing he was up to.
Stacey frequently mentions the British sociologist Anthony Giddens notion of the pure relationship in which 'equals were becoming free to pursue intimacy purely "for its own sake,", and so intimate relationships would endure only so long as they "deliver enough satisfactions for each individual to stay within it."' I believe that this will work much better for attractive, healthy, people who fall in and out of love in sync, and don't have children, than it will for anyone else. When such arrangements don't work, they sometimes end up in court, ironically for those who were trying to be transgressive.
I was already aware before I read this that polygyny is historically more common than monogamy, or should I say, systems that allow polygyny are more common. Men and women being born in generally equal numbers, obviously in such a system either a lot of men don't get married, or most people practice monogamy, especially since polygyny may also be be combined with female infanticide. There is an argument that historically, monogamy developed not to benefit women, but to reduce conflicts among men. Apparently in some societies, only elite males have access to women. There is some concern now that selective abortion has distorted the sex ratio so that many men will be unable to attract mates, and what will be the result of that? China is really worried about that. Still, as Stacey points out, there are pockets of society in which men seem to be in short supply, and perhaps some women would rather share a husband than have no husband. I can believe this, but overall, there is no benefit to the first wife. Stacey understands, sometimes, that as it is usually practiced, men are given the upper hand, but she also describes it as "a patriarchal bargain offered to and by men who are willing to accept social and economic responsibility for their sexual urges and privileges." Now that's naive. The Mormons who force women into marriage, and who then have them go on Welfare because the husband cannot pay for all of his wives and children (See The Secret Story of Polygamy) are not taking responsibility, and again, I don't buy that argument that the problem is that polygyny is illegal. Moreover, women in polygynous marriages may have no choice about either their husband's taking another wife, or getting a divorce, and may be unable to force him to support his first family, especially in societies that do not allow women to pursue legal recourse by themselves (See Miriama Bâ's So Long a Letter (African Writers).) It is possible that it could be made workable on a more egalitarian basis, but there are a lot of legal issues to resolve first and one cannot rely on people automatically living up to their obligations, any more than one can in monogamy. Actually, thinking this through for this review, I have decided that I am opposed to polygamy.
Incidentally, there are societies who practice polyandry in the Tibetan family of cultures. It is usually practiced by middle-class families, i.e., those with property that they wish to keep intact. A woman usually marries a set of brothers and becomes the mother of the next generation of heirs. It is felt that having more than one wife in the family would lead to quarrels on behalf of their respective children. It also stabilizes the population, although the participants do not cite that as a reason for the custom. There is concern about a population explosion in some societies which are becoming more affluent, and where more people are taking wage jobs, thus allowing all the brothers to have individual wives. Obviously, polyandry creates a surplus of women, some of whom become Buddhist nuns, some of whom have children on their own, but I don't know how those children are provided for. There are also group marriages in India, where a group of brothers marry one or more women. It's worth looking up "Matrilineality", 'Polyandry", etc. in Wikipedia for a starter.
I knew about the Musuo, an ethnic group living in Yunnan, but they are a very interesting culture with their matrilineal and matrilocal extended families, but no formal marriages, I think that Stacey would like to recommend them as a model, but she acknowledges the difficulty since we don't live in extended families (and we are also very mobile, I might add.) Still, with our increasing rate of people living together and reproducing without marriage, we are a fair way towards an imitation of their uncoupling of love, marriage, and children. One of the problems is the matter of custody--if both parents have parental rights and an obligation to support their children, we have a very contentious source of disagreement that the Musuo avoid with their policy of having no stated father. Multiplying the number of parents, as in the gay-lesbian arrangements that Stacey celebrates enriches the children's relationships when it works, and multiplies the potential for conflict when it doesn't, especially if legally recognized. In some cases she cites, there are potentially four parents to consider in custody arrangements and child support, and the increased possibility of step-adoptive-parents only adds to the potential confusion.
I think that Stacey goes a little too far in arguing that this proves that children, especially boys, don't need a father. True, the Musuo children don't have acknowledged fathers, but their maternal uncles live with them and provide an alternate source of live-in male role models. In a mobile, highly individualistic society of nuclear families like ours, if there is no father, it may be hard to arrange for stable male-role models. She cites as hypocrites leaders like Obama and Clinton who grew up without their father, but talk about needing fathers without considering that they may have felt a lack. Obama was also raised by his grandparents, so he had his grandfather as a substitute.
So, an extremely interesting book within its limits, that I recommend to those interested in family structures.
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
I would recommend this as a valuable read to everyone
By Kiersten
I would recommend this as a valuable read to everyone, but, in particular, people working with diverse populations. This book helped me recognize and work on my biases regarding "healthy" family structure.
Unhitched: Love, Marriage, and Family Values from West Hollywood to Western China (NYU Series in Social and Cultural Analysis), by Judith PDF
Unhitched: Love, Marriage, and Family Values from West Hollywood to Western China (NYU Series in Social and Cultural Analysis), by Judith EPub
Unhitched: Love, Marriage, and Family Values from West Hollywood to Western China (NYU Series in Social and Cultural Analysis), by Judith Doc
Unhitched: Love, Marriage, and Family Values from West Hollywood to Western China (NYU Series in Social and Cultural Analysis), by Judith iBooks
Unhitched: Love, Marriage, and Family Values from West Hollywood to Western China (NYU Series in Social and Cultural Analysis), by Judith rtf
Unhitched: Love, Marriage, and Family Values from West Hollywood to Western China (NYU Series in Social and Cultural Analysis), by Judith Mobipocket
Unhitched: Love, Marriage, and Family Values from West Hollywood to Western China (NYU Series in Social and Cultural Analysis), by Judith Kindle
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar