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All in the Family: Childhood and Fictive Kinship in Roman Society: Law And Society In The Ancient World

Autor Gaia Gianni
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 18 aug 2025
Gaia Gianni’s All in the Family explores how children shaped the development of pseudo-familial bonds, or fictive kinship, in Roman society during the early imperial period. Previous scholarship on the Roman family has primarily emphasized the patriarchal and nuclear structure of the Roman family, with children often represented as passive actors in a vacuum. Believing this to be an oversimplification of how the Roman family functioned, Gianni in her  study focuses on the ways in which Roman families raised children and formed long-term relationships with individuals outside of the nuclear family, such as friends, neighbors, nurses, and caretakers, who gradually became full-fledged members of the family unit. Through a wide variety of literary works, legal documents, and funerary epitaphs for children set up by their families and caregivers, Gianni borrows from modern sociological and anthropological theories to argue that children acted as catalysts or connecting nodes in the creation of fictive kinship with individuals who were not part of the biologically determined family. In addition to illuminating the roles and experiences of these figures, All in the Family reveals how this social network was integrated into the family both in practice and in ideology, presenting a more complex view of the Roman family than the traditional nuclear structure. 
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780472133611
ISBN-10: 0472133616
Pagini: 328
Ilustrații: 6 images
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 mm
Editura: UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN PRESS
Colecția University of Michigan Press
Seria Law And Society In The Ancient World


Notă biografică

Gaia Gianni is Assistant Professor of Classics at The Ohio State University.

Cuprins

Preface and Acknowledgments
List of Illustrations
List of Illustrations
Chapter 1        Family, Kinship and Methodology                                                                          
Chapter 2        Reading epitaphs, understanding Roman society                                                 
Chapter 3        The Bond of Milk: Allomaternal Feeding and Kinship                                                   
Chapter 4        Male child-minders. The role of tatae in child-rearing during the Empire       
Chapter 5        Delicium fuit domini, spes grata parentum: the multifaced identity of Roman deliciae                                                                                                               
Chapter 6        Epilogue                                                                                                            
Appendices                                                                                                                                
Works Cited

Descriere

The development of fictive kinship around young Roman children