A World of Their Own Making
John R. Gillis(Author)
Oxford Paperbacks (Publisher)
Published on 1. February 1998
Book
Paperback/Softback
330 pages
978-0-19-288042-0 (ISBN)
Description
Christmas, birthdays, Valentine's Day, white weddings, Father's Day and Mother's Day - all timeless traditions that have been part of family life for generations. Or are they? In this history of family life, John Gillis points out how they are rituals of recent invention, from the Victorian era. Our society is presently obsessed with the notion of "family values", and we kindle a nostalgia for a close family life that existed in previous generations. Yet John Gillis argues that the past which historians reconstruct is different from our own idealized notions. For example, families were rarely stable and secure environments: children were orphaned or left home at an early age to work and early widowhood was common. We may hark back to a "golden age" of the family but it is only by accepting that our rituals and myths must be open to perpetual revision that we can satisfy our needs - this is demonstrated by the new kinds of rites, whether collective birthdays in old age or divorce ceremonies, that are developing. As the families we live with become more fragile, the symbolic families we live by become more powerful. Our families are indeed worlds of our own making.
This book is intended for students and teachers of social history and sociology and anyone with an interest in the current debate on family values.
This book is intended for students and teachers of social history and sociology and anyone with an interest in the current debate on family values.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Oxford University Press
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Illustrations
4 b&w illustrations, notes, index
ISBN-13
978-0-19-288042-0 (9780192880420)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Content
Introduction. PART 1: Myths of Family Past. 1: At Home with Families of Strangers. 2: Life and Death in a Small Parenthesis. PART 2: A World of Their Own Making. 3: Making Times(s) for Family. 4: No Place Like Home. PART 3: The Perfect Couple. 5: Mothers Giving Birth to Motherhood. 6: Bringing Up Fathers. 7: Strangers in Our Midst. 8: Haunting the Dead. PART 4: Conclusion. 9: Remaking Our Worlds. Notes. Index