Saturday, September 28, 2019
Stone Cold Definitions: What is a Family?
American society is an interesting place: we value individualism and celebrate freedom, and strive for being the best in all that we do.à The road to achieving this is not an easy one, but as a nation, we understand this.à We train our children gradually by setting small tasks for them.à These tasks are designed to help our children ââ¬Å"practiceâ⬠for their imminent involvement in the ââ¬Å"realâ⬠world, and it is the hope of those who create these ââ¬Å"practiceâ⬠sessions that children will grow into adults who are well-adjusted, productive Americans. This training includes learning to do a variety of thingsââ¬âfrom the mundane to the complexââ¬âprimarily by trial and error.à We put training wheels on bicycles; we spread education out over a period of twenty-plus years; we encourage part-time jobs before careers and raising a pet to learn the value of life and the seriousness of responsibility; however, when it comes to creating a family, we act like it is an all-or-nothing affair.à We define it in a single way, and access it as ââ¬Å"successfulâ⬠only in the extremist of circumstances.à American society may value individualism, celebrate freedom, and strive for perfection, but it can be an extraordinarily judgmental place for those who fall outside the parameters of the traditional definition of ââ¬Å"family.â⬠Barbara Kingsolver examines the definition of ââ¬Å"familyâ⬠in her piece, ââ¬Å"Stone Soup: What Does It Mean To Be a Family, Anyway?â⬠à Her conclusion: that the defined parameters are simply too narrow and that Americaââ¬â¢s continuing to use this false standard is detrimental to all people. There can be little doubt that the United States values individualism; however, it seems as though individualism is only acceptable if the involved party conforms to preconceived norms and moral standards set by the majority when exercising this right to be ââ¬Å"individual.â⬠à Barbara Kingsolver asks readers ââ¬Å"in the catalog of family values, where do we rank an occasion such as this?â⬠(305). She is referring to a childââ¬â¢s soccer game and the fact that the child in question is surrounded by primary and extended family membersââ¬âan entire cheering section of his own, but that social construct calls his family ââ¬Å"brokenâ⬠(305).à Obviously, ââ¬Å"Andyâ⬠is not suffering for lack of anything while playing soccerââ¬âthere is nothing at all ââ¬Å"brokenâ⬠about him or the people who make up his family.à Kingsolverââ¬â¢s point is powerful, and she demands each of us step back and consider the reason for family and the parameters by which the success of this configuration of people is judged. The point of people joining together to create a unified structure (i.e. a ââ¬Å"familyâ⬠) is to strengthen the one by adding others.à The make-up of the family structure is rather arbitrary, and as Kingsolver points out, in other countries as well as in Americaââ¬â¢s past, the presence of several generations under one roof was commonplace (308).à Modern society has changed the basic dynamic of ââ¬Å"family,â⬠expecting the branching out of children as they reach adulthood, and the defining of parenting ââ¬Å"successâ⬠by an offspringââ¬â¢s financial and familial productivity out in the world. This does not sound at all like the makings of a strong ââ¬Å"individualâ⬠; it sounds very much like a cookie-cutter environment churning out cookie-cutter people.à Kingsolver points out that ââ¬Å"there's a current in the air with ferocious moral force [. . .] claiming there is only one right way to do it, the Way It Has Always Beenâ⬠and expresses how nonsensical this attitude is (305). If we operated under the guise of ââ¬Å"the Way It Has Always Been,â⬠weââ¬â¢d still have slavery, children working in sweat shops, women who had no control over their own money, legalized domestic violence, etc.à Part of this nationââ¬â¢s strength comes from its ability to recognize flaws in its operations, make the necessary changes, and move on.à Why are we so slow to apply this to family?à As Kingsolver puts it, ââ¬Å"this narrow view [of family] is so pickled and absurd I'm astonished that it gets airplayâ⬠(305).à Simply put, a group of people who join together to perform everyday tasks, including caring for a child/children, paying bills, maintaining a home, and caring for one another is a family. People who were born before the internet, cellular phones, and the microwave oven survived, and many of them continue to do so without having adapted or integrated any of those items into their daily lives.à Those of us who make use of modern technology are not harmed by the lack of understanding or participation of those who choose to remain ââ¬Å"behindâ⬠the times. However, those who insist on the ââ¬Å"traditionalâ⬠definition of ââ¬Å"familyâ⬠and persist in applying derogatory terms to the variety of familial make-ups that have become more prevalent are harming those who choose to acknowledge familial advances.à ââ¬Å"Divorce, remarriage, single parenthood, gay parents, and blended families simply are. They're facts of our timeâ⬠(307). It seems odd that in a nation that is so sold on individuality and freedom of choice that it hasà begun to package cheese in balls, slabs, individually wrapped slices, and sticks that we shy awayà from a multi-faceted definition of family.à Perhaps the problem is the way in which people lookà at things.à Can it be that only a single parent struggling to get by understands that the slab isà cheapest, and that it has the added benefit of oneââ¬â¢s being able to cut it and wrap it in a variety ofà sizes and shapes that can be determined based on need?à Isnââ¬â¢t this a simple, physical example ofà the old adage that anyway you slice a thing, it is still the thing?à Does it really matter what theà make-up of the family is as long as it fulfills it goals?à There are legitimate reasons for theà changes seen in the modern family. ââ¬Å"Some of the reasons listed by sociologists for these familyà reconstructions are: the idea of marriage as a romantic partnership rather than a pragmatic one; aà shift in women's expectations, from servility to self-respect and independence; and longevityâ⬠(Kingsolver 307). Prepare a list of the things a person might fight hardest for in terms of ââ¬Å"freedom,â⬠and the freedom to choose a life partner has got to be near the top, and this freedom is not about oneââ¬â¢s orientation: it is about oneââ¬â¢s freedomââ¬âperiod.à Whether straight or gay, single or married, the freedom to enter into or leave a relationship seems fundamental. Barbara Kingsolver discusses her preconceived notion of marriage and divorce: a notion that was constructed by the society in which she grew upââ¬âthe society that continues to exist in America (306).à She admits to her naà ¯ve belief that in choosing a mate one could not err, and admitted that ââ¬Å"once upon a time [she believed . . ] that everyone who [divorced] could have chosen not to do it. à That it's a lazy way out of marital problems.à That it selfishly puts personal happiness ahead of family integrity,â⬠but having lived her life and gone through a divorce, she now sees that this is simply not true. This bursts not only the bubble of her expectations, it places the rest of her family, including her children, into a category that implies imperfection and an inability to perform up to expected standards.à Kingsolver equates the ââ¬Å"judg[ing of] a familyââ¬â¢s value by its tidy symmetry is to purchase a book for its coverâ⬠(308).à Oddly, the ââ¬Å"children of divorceâ⬠are profoundly unaffected in many ways, and where adults see defeat, they see the opportunity to have two different homes and two sets of things as advantageous.à Certainly this isnââ¬â¢t always the caseââ¬âas it is not always the case that a child raised in a ââ¬Å"traditional familyâ⬠goes unscathed.à Each situation and each experience isââ¬âdare I sayââ¬âindividual. The closing anecdote in Barbara Kingsolverââ¬â¢s piece places the term Stone Soup in to context, and it is in this recollection that real advice can be seen.à While the story hinges on the soldiersââ¬â¢ plan, what happens all around them is of equal importance.à The message in the story is that both sides must be ready and willing to accept their opposition: the hungry soldiers gave in to the townspeople who in turn gave in to the hungry soldiers, and in the end, everyone is better for having shared. The same is true of the modern family.à No one should be forced to give up the ideal of ââ¬Å"familyâ⬠anymore than anyone should give up the ideal of having a cupboard filled with food; however, everyone has got to be willing to acknowledge that their definition of ââ¬Å"familyâ⬠is relativeââ¬âmuch like the ââ¬Å"fullâ⬠cupboard, and often simply adding to the pot what you can is sufficient. Work Cited Kingsolver, Barbara.à ââ¬Å"Stone Soup: What Does It Mean To Be a Family, Anyway?â⬠à The McGraw-Hill Reader: Issues Across Time.à 8th ed.à Ed. Gilbert H. Muller. à LaGuardia: City U. of New York, 2003.à 305-310.
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