Illegitimacy and Social Structures: Cross-Cultural Perspectives on Nonmarital Birth
By (Author) Lewellyn Hendrix
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th August 1996
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Sociology: family and relationships
306.874
Hardback
224
Sanctions for illegitimacy vary enormously across cultures and are linked to social structure. Some societies handle non-marital births in a relaxed way; others use restitutive sanctions; and others repressive sanctions. This study of 122 non-industrial societies shows that the regulation of illegitimacy is more varied than any particular theory suggests (and there are many, including Marxism, functionalism, sociobiology, and feminism). The work aims to test a variety of theoretical ideas about the possible factors involved in social regulation of illegitimacy social hierarchy, fraternal interest groups, female power, extended family structure, affection for children, and father involvement with infants and to examine combinations of these factors for predictive power. This study will be of interest to scholars and students in sociology, family studies, and cultural anthropology.
"This book is the first systematic cross-cultural investigation of why societies vary in how they react to illegitimacy (nonmarital births). The discussions of results and related topics are extensive, thoughtful, and constructive. The many positive results (as well as the test results that contradict various theories) will have to be accommodated by any future theory that purports to explain why some societies severely punish illegitimacy while others tolerate it without sanction. This book is a pioneering achievement."-Melvin Ember, president Human Relations Area Files, Inc.
LEWELLYN HENDRIX is Associate Professor of Sociology at Southern Illinois University in Carbondale. His articles have appeared in publications such as The Sociological Quarterly, Journal of Comparative Family Studies, and the American Journal of Sociology.