Family Relationships And Giddens's Theory Of The Family

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Traditionally, family is a form of social organization where people reside together by biological relation and emotional bonding; economic co-operation and reproduction took place. The family ideology and everyday lives were surrounded under heterosexual partner relationship, child bearing and rearing and kinship relation. But due to change of demographical transition, industrialization and globalization resulted the rise of modern nuclear family, decline of marriage, cohabitation, the changing status of children in one hand and in another hand the question arise that how people organize their family life. Now family lives and family relationships become more open, as lives are less likely to be governed by traditional norms and well-defined …show more content…

Therefore, to examine all the objectives I will follow review of literature of various empirical …show more content…

It also highlighted how they disclosure: “making friends, performing friendships, articulating friendship hierarchies, and navigating issues of status, attention, and drama” (p. 81). Pascoe (2007) indicated online self presentation and display intimacy becoming common customs among youth generation. Case studies also indicated youth are easily disclosure intimate communication, personal emotion and build up relationship in publicly. Therefore, the norms or line between private and public boundaries become disappeared. Young people are uses SNSs and post daily updates about themselves for their friends. Through which they represents of intimacy, providing a variety of ways to signal the intensity of a given relationship both through textual and visual representations. It also means that young people transforms romantic and friendship relationships. The mix of family, friends and work colleagues that are friends on social networking sites also creates new emotional demands, requiring people to think about dilemmas of de-friending and possibilities for embarrassment and offence (Holmes 2011). A study among 13-16 years old teenagers users of various online SNSs, and consisted of a series of open-ended interviews with adolescent social media users, which were conducted in their own homes. The sample, while relatively small at n=16, was gender balanced and included individuals from mixed

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