Female bonding

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Women in 1940s Tel-Aviv 055 1942 - Dance band girls at the Australian Soldier's Club, Tel-Aviv, Palestine.jpg
Women in 1940s Tel-Aviv

In ethology and social science, female bonding is the formation of a close personal relationship and patterns of friendship, attachment, and cooperation in females. [1]

Contents

Examples

Within the context of human relationships the definition and display of female bonding can be dependent on multiple factors such as age, sexual orientation, culture, race and marital status. For example, some studies have shown that there is relatively strong female bonding evidence which is shared among single women.[ citation needed ] It is evident that this particular cohort of women sees each other as lifelong confidants due to the absence of a lifelong commitment to a spouse.[ citation needed ] Along with this, the lack of commitment allows women to develop and maintain the strong ties between other single female friends.[ citation needed ]

Female bonding can be further explored within the human context of relationships within the family. For example, the positive mother-daughter ties which develop have been described to provide immense emotional, financial and instrumental support; indicating that female bonding is present. In an alternative study, a mother described her daughters as "more like sisters, communicating that equality...was an essential feature of their current relationships. They used the language of companionate ties..." [2]

In addition to mother-daughter ties, sibling ties can be carefully examined for further exemplification in female bonding. There is much evidence that sister-sister ties are the strongest ties that exist, out of the possible combinations of gendered sibling ties which are shared. In a recent study, an interviewee described her relationship shared with her sister as the most enduring and intimate of her life. [3] This further suggests the emotional sharing which is said to be the primary foundation on which female bonding is founded.

There has also been evidence within animal context regarding the genetic theory behind female bonding. A study that "investigated the social network structure of an embayment population of Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphins, Tursiops aduncus, ... examined the impact of sex...in maintaining the cohesion of the social network." [4] The results of this article prove that there was "greater influence on female[s] than on male social relationships, as association strength was positively correlated with genetic relatedness between females". [4]

See also

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<i>Social Bonding and Nurture Kinship</i>

Social Bonding and Nurture Kinship: Compatibility between Cultural and Biological Approaches is a book on human kinship and social behavior by Maximilian Holland, published in 2012. The work synthesizes the perspectives of evolutionary biology, psychology and sociocultural anthropology towards understanding human social bonding and cooperative behavior. It presents a theoretical treatment that many consider to have resolved longstanding questions about the proper place of genetic connections in human kinship and social relations, and a synthesis that "should inspire more nuanced ventures in applying Darwinian approaches to sociocultural anthropology". The book has been called "A landmark in the field of evolutionary biology" which "gets to the heart of the matter concerning the contentious relationship between kinship categories, genetic relatedness and the prediction of behavior", "places genetic determinism in the correct perspective" and serves as "a shining example of what can be achieved when excellent scholars engage fully across disciplinary boundaries."

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References

  1. "bonding - meaning of bonding in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English - LDOCE". www.ldoceonline.com.
  2. Allen, Katherine R.; Blieszner, Rosemary; Roberto, Karen A. (September 2011). "Perspectives on Extended Family and Fictive Kin in the Later Years: Strategies and Meanings of Kin Reinterpretation". Journal of Family Issues. 32 (9): 1156–1177. doi:10.1177/0192513x11404335. S2CID   145401804.
  3. Wells, Juliette (Winter 2009). "The Closeness of Sisters: Imagining Cassandra and Jane". Persuasions. 30 (1).
  4. 1 2 Wiszniewski, Joanna; Lusseau, David; Möller, Luciana M. (November 2010). "Female bisexual kinship ties maintain social cohesion in a dolphin network". Animal Behaviour. 80 (5): 895–904. doi:10.1016/j.anbehav.2010.08.013. S2CID   53153102.

Further reading