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Family Values and Modern Identities

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2015
full article (85.68Kb)
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Authors
Đurić, Jelena
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Abstract
This paper will consider the problem of identity which reflects ‘family values’ transmitted usually to the child in its first cultural environment. That's why the family is substantial factor of enculturation: internalization of culture, developing a social identity, providing an ascribed social status and early gender socialization – the child usually socialize by getting used to routines of the family members, receiving signs of their needs and expectations. Hence, the personal life experience of father and mother are crucial to the resultant parental values that would be transmitted to the child. But apart from parental identities, their upbringing practices and educational patterns also depend on cultural worldviews and social policies. The collision among the two is present in Serbia where cultural recognition of family values, originating from the traditional society, still seems resilient to modernization policy (since the period of socialism with its ‘state feminism’ ...that promoted women rights as ‘equality in employment’). Provoking paradox in the issue of women rights, modern values also assumed a need to harmonize both of women's roles – as industrial and as domestic labor force. Waiting for the idea of that harmonization to spread globally, as the reconciliation of family values and modern identities, one should know that mostly women (mother) mediate child's early self – development, and that modern emancipation made that task even harder for her requiring greater engagement of men in the child's care and domestic activities. Basically, it demands both halves of humanity to emancipate as well, just this time maybe not so outwardly, from traditional and modern roles, but inwardly, from egocentric drive to dominate. Only that could mean shifting the paradigm from the obsolete age of domination towards the appealing age of partnership.

Keywords:
personal identity / culture / values / change / family
Source:
Mind the Gap. Family, Socialization and Gender, 2015, 219-228
Publisher:
  • Beograd : Institut za filozofiju i društvenu teoriju; Centar za etiku, pravo i primenjenu filozofiju
Funding / projects:
  • Studying climate change and its influence on environment: impacts, adaptation and mitigation (RS-43007)
Note:
  • Edited by:Tamara Petrović-TrifunovićSanja Milutinović BojanićGazela Pudar Draško

ISBN: 978-86-82417-81-1

[ Google Scholar ]
Handle
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rifdt_1622
URI
http://rifdt.instifdt.bg.ac.rs/123456789/1622
Collections
  • Radovi istraživača
Institution/Community
IFDT
TY  - CHAP
AU  - Đurić, Jelena
PY  - 2015
UR  - http://rifdt.instifdt.bg.ac.rs/123456789/1622
AB  - This paper will consider the problem of identity which reflects ‘family values’
transmitted usually to the child in its first cultural environment. That's why the family is
substantial factor of enculturation: internalization of culture, developing a social identity,
providing an ascribed social status and early gender socialization – the child usually socialize
by getting used to routines of the family members, receiving signs of their needs and
expectations. Hence, the personal life experience of father and mother are crucial to the
resultant parental values that would be transmitted to the child. But apart from parental
identities, their upbringing practices and educational patterns also depend on cultural
worldviews and social policies. The collision among the two is present in Serbia where
cultural recognition of family values, originating from the traditional society, still seems
resilient to modernization policy (since the period of socialism with its ‘state feminism’ that
promoted women rights as ‘equality in employment’). Provoking paradox in the issue of
women rights, modern values also assumed a need to harmonize both of women's roles – as
industrial and as domestic labor force. Waiting for the idea of that harmonization to spread
globally, as the reconciliation of family values and modern identities, one should know that
mostly women (mother) mediate child's early self – development, and that modern
emancipation made that task even harder for her requiring greater engagement of men in the
child's care and domestic activities. Basically, it demands both halves of humanity to
emancipate as well, just this time maybe not so outwardly, from traditional and modern roles,
but inwardly, from egocentric drive to dominate. Only that could mean shifting the paradigm
from the obsolete age of domination towards the appealing age of partnership.
PB  - Beograd : Institut za filozofiju i društvenu teoriju; Centar za etiku, pravo i primenjenu filozofiju
T2  - Mind the Gap. Family, Socialization and Gender
T1  - Family Values and Modern Identities
SP  - 219
EP  - 228
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rifdt_1622
ER  - 
@inbook{
author = "Đurić, Jelena",
year = "2015",
abstract = "This paper will consider the problem of identity which reflects ‘family values’
transmitted usually to the child in its first cultural environment. That's why the family is
substantial factor of enculturation: internalization of culture, developing a social identity,
providing an ascribed social status and early gender socialization – the child usually socialize
by getting used to routines of the family members, receiving signs of their needs and
expectations. Hence, the personal life experience of father and mother are crucial to the
resultant parental values that would be transmitted to the child. But apart from parental
identities, their upbringing practices and educational patterns also depend on cultural
worldviews and social policies. The collision among the two is present in Serbia where
cultural recognition of family values, originating from the traditional society, still seems
resilient to modernization policy (since the period of socialism with its ‘state feminism’ that
promoted women rights as ‘equality in employment’). Provoking paradox in the issue of
women rights, modern values also assumed a need to harmonize both of women's roles – as
industrial and as domestic labor force. Waiting for the idea of that harmonization to spread
globally, as the reconciliation of family values and modern identities, one should know that
mostly women (mother) mediate child's early self – development, and that modern
emancipation made that task even harder for her requiring greater engagement of men in the
child's care and domestic activities. Basically, it demands both halves of humanity to
emancipate as well, just this time maybe not so outwardly, from traditional and modern roles,
but inwardly, from egocentric drive to dominate. Only that could mean shifting the paradigm
from the obsolete age of domination towards the appealing age of partnership.",
publisher = "Beograd : Institut za filozofiju i društvenu teoriju; Centar za etiku, pravo i primenjenu filozofiju",
journal = "Mind the Gap. Family, Socialization and Gender",
booktitle = "Family Values and Modern Identities",
pages = "219-228",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rifdt_1622"
}
Đurić, J.. (2015). Family Values and Modern Identities. in Mind the Gap. Family, Socialization and Gender
Beograd : Institut za filozofiju i društvenu teoriju; Centar za etiku, pravo i primenjenu filozofiju., 219-228.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rifdt_1622
Đurić J. Family Values and Modern Identities. in Mind the Gap. Family, Socialization and Gender. 2015;:219-228.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rifdt_1622 .
Đurić, Jelena, "Family Values and Modern Identities" in Mind the Gap. Family, Socialization and Gender (2015):219-228,
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rifdt_1622 .

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