Social Homogamy in the Canton of Luzern (Switzerland)
Options
BORIS DOI
Date of Publication
April 2, 2016
Publication Type
Conference Item
Division/Institute
Contributor
Language
English
Description
Social homogamy is an essential aspect of the reproduction of social structures and an important pathway for the effect of social origin on the social standing of a person’s family. This is especially true women in societies that define women’s social position almost exclusively via her husband’s position. This paper investigates social homogamy in the context of the rural but industrializing Canton of Luzern (Switzerland) in the middle of the 19th century (1834-75). Research on social homogamy in the pre-survey era relies on sources that include information on both parents’ social status of a couple. Unlike other countries, such sources are rare in Switzerland but the process of local state building in the canton of Luzern led to a temporary exception: Marriage registers for the period 1834-75 were maintained by means of preprinted tables that required the priest of a parish to name the occupation of the bridal couple and the bride’s as well as the groom’s father. This paper makes use of a newly collected random sample of the entries of this register (N=1941) which allows to study differences of social homogamy by type of the parish (no industry, some industry, city of Luzern) and two birth cohorts (1834-54 and 1855-75). Using multilevel models, and as far as data allow, aspects of Kalmijn’s tripartite clusters of determinants of homogamy are tested. Results indicate that migration, groom’s individual autonomy as well as the presence of a nearby train station weaken and first sector occupations strengthen the association between both fathers’ status which is in line with the theoretical expectations.
File(s)
File | File Type | Format | Size | License | Publisher/Copright statement | Content | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
PresentationSeilerESSHC16.pdf | slideshow | Adobe PDF | 1.48 MB | presentation |