Family and household key terms

Cards (36)

  • household - a place where you live and who you live with
  • What is a family - many things the family is an intimate domestic group of people related by blood , sexual or legal ties
  • Types of family
    -nuclear family
    -step family’s
    -single parent
    -extended family
    -same gender parents
    -foster family
    -chosen family
  • Why are gender roles changing
    -economically active mothers
    -decline in extended family
    -weakening gender roles
    -technology and living standards
    -commercialisation of domestic labour
  • Allowance system-men give women an allowance to budget
  • Pooling - both parents work and have joint responsibilities for spending e.g joint bank
  • Instrumental roles - masculine jobs E.G bread winner ,discipline
  • Expressive role - feminine role E.G emotional, caring , domestic
  • Dual earner families - both partners earn money
  • Lone parent families - single parent with no partner
  • Joint - couples share domestic labour and spread leisure time together
  • Separate- individual roles within the family both in the terms of domestic labour and leisure activities
  • What was the idealized view of the family during the industrial era?
    The family was seen as a retreat from stress and turmoil.
  • How was the household viewed in relation to the world of work?
    The household was viewed as separate from the world of work.
  • What major themes were prevalent in art and literature regarding home life?
    The pleasures and virtues of home life were major themes.
  • What was the differentiation of sexual roles in society during this period?
    Men were associated with the public sphere, while married women were confined to the home.
  • How were working-class mothers perceived in society?
    They were singled out for particular approbation.
  • What contradictions were exposed in the ideology of separate spheres?
    Anxieties arose over issues such as child care, birth control, and gender roles.
  • What was the primary family structure in modified Victorian middle-class families?
    The family structure was primarily nuclear.
  • How did the living arrangements of working-class families differ from those of middle-class families?
    Working-class families often housed lodgers and had extended family relations for support.
  • What was the norm regarding marriage during this period?
    Companionate marriage was the norm.
  • What factors influenced the choice of marriage partners in the 19th century?
    Participants exercised free choice based on mutual love, subject to parental veto.
  • How did Lord Lyndhurst's Act affect marriage choices in 1835?
    It narrowed the choice of marriage partners and was not modified until 1907.
  • Was the romantic ideal of Victorian marriage based on equality?
    No, it was not based on equality.
  • Complementary - traditional gender roles where women are responsible for housework and men are responsible for earning money
  • Separate - traditional gender division of labour where women are responsible for housework and children while men focus on paid employment
  • Extended family - grandparents, uncles etc live together
  • Reconstituted families - stepfamilies
  • Single parent families - one parent is responsible for all the children's needs
  • Single earner families - one wage earner
  • Expressive role - feminine jobs E.G housework, childcare
  • Division of labour - how tasks within the home are divided between male and female members of the household
  • Egalitarian - both partners share responsibilities equally
  • Patriarchy - a social system in which males hold power over females
  • Shared - both parents share responsibility for childcare and domestic tasks equally
  • Conjugal role strain - when there is conflict between work and home life due to competing demands