SON PREFERENCE, MARRIAGE, AND INTERGENERATIONAL TRANSFER IN RURAL CHINA

Rural Chinese society has historically been dominated by a rigid malecentered patrilineal family system, and virilocal marriage remains overwhelmingly dominant. Under this system, parents call in a daughter-in-law for each of their sons, and all sons are entitled to stay home after marriage and core...

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Hauptverfasser: Feldman, Marcus W, Li, Shuzhuo, Li, Nan, Tuljapurkar, Shripad, Jin, Xiaoyi
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Li, Shuzhuo
Li, Nan
Tuljapurkar, Shripad
Jin, Xiaoyi
description Rural Chinese society has historically been dominated by a rigid malecentered patrilineal family system, and virilocal marriage remains overwhelmingly dominant. Under this system, parents call in a daughter-in-law for each of their sons, and all sons are entitled to stay home after marriage and coreside with their parents for a period of time until family division occurs or until both of their parents pass away. A son’s offspring use his father’s surname to continue the family lineage. Family property is usually inherited equally among all sons, and sons are obliged to take care of their parents in their old age.
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subjects Adults
Age
Anthropology
Asian studies
Behavioral sciences
Biometrics
Biostatistics
Children
Chinese culture
Clans
Consumer economics
Daughters
East Asian studies
Economic disciplines
Economics
Ethnography
Ethnology
Families
Family members
Family names
Health care industry
Health information
Health sciences
Home economics
Housekeeping
Human physical characteristics
Human populations
Human societies
Language
Lexicology
Linguistics
Names
Older adults
Parents
Personal names
Persons
Population studies
Proper names
Sinology
Social institutions
Social sciences
Social structures
Sociology
Sons
title SON PREFERENCE, MARRIAGE, AND INTERGENERATIONAL TRANSFER IN RURAL CHINA
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