Chapter Eight Choosing Others: Dating and Mate Selection

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Chapter Eight Choosing Others: Dating and Mate Selection. Why do We Date?. Manifest Functions Fulfilled Maturation Fun and recreation Companionship Love and affection Mate selection. Why do We Date?. Latent Functions Fulfilled Socialization Social status Fulfillment of ego needs - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Chapter Eight

Choosing Others: Dating and Mate Selection

Why do We Date?

• Manifest Functions Fulfilled• Maturation• Fun and recreation• Companionship• Love and affection• Mate selection

Why do We Date? • Latent Functions Fulfilled

• Socialization• Social status• Fulfillment of ego needs• Sexual experimentation and intimacy• Big business

The Dating Traditions• Gender role scripts – who does what• Bat mitzvah and bar mitzvah—rites of

passage in the Jewish community.• Proms• “Going steady” and “getting pinned” were

popular after WWII. • What are the terms now?

• “Going with” or “going together”• “Hang out.”• “Getting together”• “Hooking up”

Personal ads—published in mainstream

magazines, on the Web, etc.

Mail-order brides — 200+ international services

Cyber dating & Online Matchmaking

How Do We Meet People

How Do We Meet People?Professional matchmakers—make a

living by matching people up.

Speed dating

Choosing Whom We Date: Choices and Constraints

• What constrains us when it comes to who we date?

Homogamy• Homogamy refers to dating or

marrying someone with similar backgrounds to our own.

• Why are we attracted to similarity?

Filter Theory• According to filter theory, we use

specific criteria and narrow number of candidates.

• What filters do you use?

Why Do We Date?• Sociologists consider dating a marriage

market in which the participants look at the assets and liabilities in each partner and decide which is the best for what they have to offer.

Who’s AvailableCensus Data – Who’s available• Who’s Not in Prison?• The Times interviewed parents Carl Harris and

Charlene Hamilton, whose daughters grew up without a father. Mr. Harris, a crack dealer who received a 20-year prison sentence at the age of 24, was forced to abandon his family when he was locked up.

http://rt.com/usa/incarceration-african-black-prison-606/

Results of Men In Prison“Basically, I was locked up with him,” she told

the Times. “My mind was locked up. My life was locked up. Our daughters grew up without a father.”

“A man will have three mistresses, and they’ll each put up with it because there are no other men around,” Hamilton said. Epidemiologists believe the AIDS rate among African-Americans would be lower if the incarceration rate dropped. 

Theories of Mate SelectionSocial exchange theory—posits that

people will begin and remain in a relationship if the rewards are higher than the costs.

Equity theory—an intimate relationship is satisfying and stable if both partners see it as equitable and mutually beneficial.

How We Evaluate a Relationship

Outcome Level – satisfaction based on rewards vs. costs.

Comparison Level – comparison with past relationships and other’s relationships

Comparison Alternative Level – comparison with next best option (dependency)

– OL + Clalt > CL = Happy and not dependent– OL > CL > Clalt = Happy but dependent– CL > OL > Clalt = Unhappy without alternatives

Relationship ViolenceWhen would you say “I deserved that”

after someone to hit you?

Relationship Violence• Survey of 200 teens, 46% said she

was responsible.

Relationship Violence• Types of violence

• Physical• Emotional• Sexual

Relationship Violence• May come from jealousy

• May appear as pattern of control• Controlling behaviors

• The narcissist

Cycle of Abuse1. Honeymoon Phase

2. Tension Building Phase

3. Acting Out Phase

4. Honeymoon Phase

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