Polygamous Families in Contemporary Society

Front Cover
Cambridge University Press, Jul 26, 1996 - Family & Relationships - 512 pages
In this intriguing book, social psychologist Irwin Altman and anthropologist Joseph Ginat examine husband-wife and wife-wife relationships in contemporary Mormon polygamous families. The authors describe how husbands and wives in plural families cope with their complex lifestyle in various facets of everyday life, including courtship, weddings, honeymoons, adjustments to a new life, living arrangements, and the husband's rotation among wives. Other topics include budget and resource management, psychological attachments to homes, and the social-emotional relationships among family members. This pioneering, comprehensive analysis of life in modern day Mormon polygamous families uses first-hand interviews and observations to describe this unusual family lifestyle. It adds to our understanding of close relationships and complements knowledge on other modern relationship forms, such as single-parent families, blended families, and cohabitating partners. This is important reading for researchers in social psychology, anthropology, and religious studies. Lay readers will also find the subject matter to be fascinating.
 

Contents

Introduction
1
Historical background
19
Early stages of relationships
87
Deciding to add a new wife to a family
107
Wedding and marriage ceremonies
126
Honeymoons
143
Adjusting to a new plural marriage
173
Home environments of plural families
181
Budget and resource management
302
Socialemotional and family relationships
337
Relationships between wives
366
Family structure
387
Parents and children
423
Appendix A Methodology and procedure
447
Appendix B Demographics of Mormon polygyny
460
Notes
479

Wives and homes
213
Husbands and homes
251
Managing everyday life
277

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