home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=94TT0931>
- <title>
- Jul. 18, 1994: Essay:Oh, Those Family Values
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Jul. 18, 1994 Attention Deficit Disorder
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ESSAY, Page 62
- Oh, THOSE FAMILY VALUES
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Barbara Ehrenreich
- </p>
- <p> A disturbing subtext runs through our recent media fixations.
- Parents abuse sons--allegedly at least, in the Menendez case--who in turn rise up and kill them. A husband torments a wife,
- who retaliates with a kitchen knife. Love turns into obsession,
- between the Simpsons anyway, and then perhaps into murderous
- rage: the family, in other words, becomes personal hell.
- </p>
- <p> This accounts for at least part of our fascination with the
- Bobbitts and the Simpsons and the rest of them. We live in a
- culture that fetishizes the family as the ideal unit of human
- community, the perfect container for our lusts and loves. Politicians
- of both parties are aggressively "pro-family," even abortion-rights
- bumper stickers proudly link "pro-family" and "pro-choice."
- Only with the occasional celebrity crime do we allow ourselves
- to think the nearly unthinkable: that the family may not be
- the ideal and perfect living arrangement after all--that it
- can be a nest of pathology and a cradle of gruesome violence.
- </p>
- <p> It's a scary thought, because the family is at the same time
- our "haven in a heartless world." Theoretically, and sometimes
- actually, the family nurtures warm, loving feelings, uncontaminated
- by greed or power hunger. Within the family, and often only
- within the family, individuals are loved "for themselves," whether
- or not they are infirm, incontinent, infantile or eccentric.
- The strong (adults and especially males) lie down peaceably
- with the small and weak.
- </p>
- <p> But consider the matter of wife battery. We managed to dodge
- it in the Bobbitt case and downplay it as a force in Tonya Harding's
- life. Thanks to O.J., though, we're caught up now in a mass
- consciousness-raising session, grimly absorbing the fact that
- in some areas domestic violence sends as many women to emergency
- rooms as any other form of illness, injury or assault.
- </p>
- <p> Still, we shrink from the obvious inference: for a woman, home
- is, statistically speaking, the most dangerous place to be.
- Her worst enemies and potential killers are not strangers but
- lovers, husbands and those who claimed to love her once. Similarly,
- for every child like Polly Klaas who is killed by a deranged
- criminal on parole, dozens are abused and murdered by their
- own relatives. Home is all too often where the small and weak
- fear to lie down and shut their eyes.
- </p>
- <p> At some deep, queasy, Freudian level, we all know this. Even
- in the ostensibly "functional," nonviolent family, where no
- one is killed or maimed, feelings are routinely bruised and
- often twisted out of shape. There is the slap or put-down that
- violates a child's shaky sense of self, the cold, distracted
- stare that drives a spouse to tears, the little digs and rivalries.
- At best, the family teaches the finest things human beings can
- learn from one another--generosity and love. But it is also,
- all too often, where we learn nasty things like hate and rage
- and shame.
- </p>
- <p> Americans act out their ambivalence about the family without
- ever owning up to it. Millions adhere to creeds that are militantly
- "pro-family." But at the same time millions flock to therapy
- groups that offer to heal the "inner child" from damage inflicted
- by family life. Legions of women band together to revive the
- self-esteem they lost in supposedly loving relationships and
- to learn to love a little less. We are all, it is often said,
- "in recovery." And from what? Our families, in most cases.
- </p>
- <p> There is a long and honorable tradition of "anti-family" thought.
- The French philosopher Charles Fourier taught that the family
- was a barrier to human progress; early feminists saw a degrading
- parallel between marriage and prostitution. More recently, the
- renowned British anthropologist Edmund Leach stated that "far
- from being the basis of the good society, the family, with its
- narrow privacy and tawdry secrets, is the source of all discontents."
- </p>
- <p> Communes proved harder to sustain than plain old couples, and
- the conservatism of the '80s crushed the last vestiges of life-style
- experimentation.Today even gays and lesbians are eager to get
- married and take up family life. Feminists have learned to couch
- their concerns as "family issues," and public figures would
- sooner advocate free cocaine on demand than criticize the family.
- Hence our unseemly interest in O.J. and Erik, Lyle and Lorena:
- they allow us, however gingerly, to break the silence on the
- hellish side of family life.
- </p>
- <p> But the discussion needs to become a lot more open and forthright.
- We may be stuck with the family--at least until someone invents
- a sustainable alternative--but the family, with its deep,
- impacted tensions and longings, can hardly be expected to be
- the moral foundation of everything else. In fact, many families
- could use a lot more outside interference in the form of counseling
- and policing, and some are so dangerously dysfunctional that
- they ought to be encouraged to disband right away. Even healthy
- families need outside sources of moral guidance to keep the
- internal tensions from imploding--and this means, at the very
- least, a public philosophy of gender equality and concern for
- child welfare. When, instead, the larger culture aggrandizes
- wife beaters, degrades women or nods approvingly at child slappers,
- the family gets a little more dangerous for everyone, and so,
- inevitably, does the larger world.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-