Discuss how sociologist Judith Stacey's concept of the modern family differs from her idea of the postmodern family. How does class factor into each type of family?

What will be an ideal response?


Feedback: Stacey's model of the modern family can be described as the 1950s model of an intact nuclear household composed of a male breadwinner, his full-time homemaker wife, and their dependent children. Although this family form was dominant in society, its prevalence varied by social class.The pattern clearly prevailed in middle- and working-class families but was much less likely among low-income families, where women have always had to work outside the home to supplement family income, and in immigrant families who used kinship connections to adjust in the new society. In contrast, she uses the term postmodern families for the diverse family forms that include a different arrangement than a breadwinner husband, homemaker wife, and their dependent children. These include divorce-extended families, families with adult children or elderly parents living at home, single parents with children, among others. These postmodern family forms are new to working-class and middle-class families as they adjust to the structural transformation, but they are not new to those in poverty.

Sociology

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A. mortality B. morbidity C. fecundity D. death index

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Cross-sectional designs are often used to

a. obtain an in-depth description on one case within its social context. b. test causal hypotheses. c. observe a change over time. d. obtain an in-depth description on one case within its social context and to observe a change over time. e. none of these describe cross-sectional designs.

Sociology