Since my first post, going trough the third one, I have pointed out how many different cultures are in the world, so many life styles. I have also said that culture depends on how people see the world and understand everything around them. This post is focused on marriage, and as everything else I have talked about in my previous posts, that things vary from culture to culture, so is marriage as well. In this modern western culture, when we think about marriage, what first comes to mind perhaps, is the union of two opposite-sex persons united by love, with the purpose of creating a nuclear family and have children. However, around the world in different cultures, the concept and practice of marriage changes, a lot.
First of all, since the definition of marriage is very diverse in the world, anthropologists have created their own cross-cultural definition that covers most known cultures. There are three main characteristics anthropologist point in their definition: One, marriage is culturally constructed. This means that there is not a universal definition for marriage, rather that each culture, from their ethnocentric point of view, gives a particular definition. Of course, there are some similarities among many cultures, but I have read articles of very singular concepts about marriage. Two, marriage is an adjustment to a particular environment or context. Each type of marriage and concept makes sense on each culture from their point of view. Even one can find absolutely absurd, from one’s ethnocentric view, a kind of marriage, but for that culture makes completely meaning to them, and it is because its concept is shaped by the environment around them, and it meets specific needs for the culture’s survival. Three, marriage, in most cases, is more important to the context of society than to the people getting married. This means that marriage’s purposes and benefits go much further than the people getting united—it is more about creating social and community connections in order to survive according to each culture’s context. These three main points together is what many cultures share about marriage’s concept.
Finally, with all this about marriage and culture aspects I have been reading so far in the semester, I get to a conclusion that had helped me in seeing the world around me differently. I see that cultures are really unique, that everybody has their own interpretation of the world and that sometimes is very difficult to understand them. But, no matter how odd for one or how senseless from one’s ethnocentric view a culture’s concept is, it would always have an explanation, and will always make sense for the other culture as they see the world. The same as happens to one looking at others, they could think the same about one. Something that is completely normal for one, and makes totally sense in its way, it may be totally strange for other people and they could find no explanation. I now see more clearly the real culture diversity we have in our world—what humans are and think. This is something we all have to be aware of in order to understand and coexist harmoniously in peace to live in a better world each day.
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