Publication | Closed Access
Race, Ethnicity, and the Achievement Syndrome
270
Citations
0
References
1959
Year
EthnicityAchievement SyndromeSocial PsychologyStructural PatternsEducationVarious TypesEthnic Group RelationSocial SciencesRaceIntimate RelationshipAfrican American StudiesRacial GroupEthnic StudiesRacial EquityKin SelectionSocial IdentityEthnic IdentityKin LinesMarriageRomantic RelationshipsCultureSocial BehaviorSociologyAnthropologyInterpersonal Attraction
In this analysis I have attempted to show the integration of love with various types of social structures. As against considerable contemporary opinion among both sociologists and anthropologists, I suggest that love is a universal psychological potential, which is controlled by a range of five structural patterns, all of which are attempts to see to it that youngsters do not make entirely free choices of their future spouses. Only if kin lines are unimportant, and this condition is found in no society as a whole, will entirely free choice be permitted. Some structural arrangements seek to prevent entirely the outbreak of love, while others harness it. Since the kin lines of the upper strata are of greater social importance to them than those of lower strata are to the lower strata members, the former exercise a more effective control over this choice. Even where there is almost a formally free choice of mate-and I have suggested that this pattern is widespread, to be found among a substantial segment of the earth's societies-this choice is guided by peer group and parents toward a mate who will be acceptable to the kin and friend groupings. The theoretical importance of love is thus to be seen in the sociostructural patterns which are developed to keep it from disrupting existing social arrangements.