Family Life in 20th-Century America: Family Life through History
Autor Marilyn Coleman Ph.D., Lawrence H. Ganong, Kelly Warziniken Limba Engleză Hardback – 29 apr 2007 – vârsta până la 17 ani
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780313333569
ISBN-10: 0313333564
Pagini: 344
Dimensiuni: 156 x 235 x 32 mm
Greutate: 0.69 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Greenwood
Seria Family Life through History
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0313333564
Pagini: 344
Dimensiuni: 156 x 235 x 32 mm
Greutate: 0.69 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Greenwood
Seria Family Life through History
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Notă biografică
Marilyn Coleman is Director of Graduate Studies and Professor in Human Development and Family Studies at the University of Missouri. She has co-authored with Larry Ganong Stepfamily Relationships: Developments, Dynamics and Intervention (2004), Handbook of Contemporary Families: Considering the Past, Contemplating the Future (2003), Changing Families, Changing Responsibilities: Family Obligations Following Divorce and Remarriage (1999) and Remarried Family Relationships (1994).Lawrence H. Ganong is Professor in Human Development and Family Studies at the University of Missouri. He has co-authored with Marilyn Coleman Stepfamily Relationships: Developments, Dynamics and Intervention (2004), Handbook of Contemporary Families: Considering the Past, Contemplating the Future (2003), Changing Families, Changing Responsibilities: Family Obligations Following Divorce and Remarriage (1999) and Remarried Family Relationships (1994).Kelly Warzinik is a Ph.D student in Human Development and Family Studies at the University of Missouri.
Recenzii
How we define the term the American family varies widely depending on the decade and the person attempting to do the defining. The onset of urbanization, the rise of consumerist culture and the related alterations in the workforce, globalization, the reinterpretation of gender and sexual roles and opportunities, technology, and the increasing number of people whose personal lives have gone public have become family issues, and here general readers learn about the major cultural and historical trends. The authors wisely begin with a chronology listing major legislation and events that affected family life, then describe courtship, cohabitation, marriage, divorce, remarriage, bereavement, domestic arrangements and traditions, the relationship between work and family life, the changing ways of mothers and motherhood, the roles of men in families, children and adolescents, family abuse and neglect and alternative family forms.
This volume, which will be especially useful in classes on family sociology, draws on an extensive secondary literature to chronicle a century of changes in family size, structure, roles, functions, rituals, and power dynamics. . . . The volume's greatest strength lies in reminding readers that rather than being fixed and unchanging, families, across the past century, have been dynamic, ever-changing systems in which change has been neither steady nor predictable. . . . Especially noteworthy are the book's discussions of the shifting experiences of stepfamilies, grandparenthood, and widowhood.
A major strength of this book . . . is that it provides a broad overview of family change in the United States throughout the 20th century. . . . The reader of Family Life in 20th-Century America, whether a researcher or a student, will find much useful and illuminating information.
This volume, which will be especially useful in classes on family sociology, draws on an extensive secondary literature to chronicle a century of changes in family size, structure, roles, functions, rituals, and power dynamics. . . . The volume's greatest strength lies in reminding readers that rather than being fixed and unchanging, families, across the past century, have been dynamic, ever-changing systems in which change has been neither steady nor predictable. . . . Especially noteworthy are the book's discussions of the shifting experiences of stepfamilies, grandparenthood, and widowhood.
A major strength of this book . . . is that it provides a broad overview of family change in the United States throughout the 20th century. . . . The reader of Family Life in 20th-Century America, whether a researcher or a student, will find much useful and illuminating information.