Synopsis
The author of a landmark study of Pilgrim family life called A Little Commonwealth and the Bancroft Prizewinning Entertaining Satan here presents a major contribution to the rapidly growing literature on "family history." Ranging over the entire span of American History, this book covers everything from the changing nature of fatherhood the relevance of the past for present-day policy making. Several chapters raise important questions and are sure to arouse controversy. On childhood, for example, Demos challenges the prevalent view that past eras witnessed more "abuse" than our own day. And on adolescence he reconsiders the premise that human development. His discussion of middle age points out sharp contrasts between the colonial period and the present. And his investigation of the much-neglected role of father finds greater change there than in the roles of all other family members combined.
Eschewing the narrow technical focus--and language--of most scholars of the family, be they sociologists, anthropologists, psychologists, of historians, the book explores the subtle interrelations between past and present, between practical and theoretical concerns. Offering fresh insight into a subject of the broadest possible human interest, this vigorous revisionist history will intrigue not only academic specialists, but also practitioners in the "helping professions" and readers of history at large.
About the Author:
John Demos is Professor of History at Yale University and formerly taught at Brandeis University. In addition to his research as a historian, this book draws on Demos's personal experience as a member of the Carnegie Council on Children.
Reviews
This is a collection of eight essays by Demos, a specialist on the history of the family in colonial America. Essays on the image of the family, fatherhood, adolescence, and middle-age trace changes in family life from colonial time to the present. The remaining pieces discuss research in family history, old age in New England, the possibility of child abuse in colonial times, and the Carnegie Council on Children. Those dealing with historical development of family life, especially in colonial New England, are informative and highly readable. The article on the Carnegie Council on Children, however, does not add anything to the main thrust of this book. Four of the pieces have been previously published. Recommended for academic and large public libraries. Kathleen Farago, Lakewood P.L, Ohio
Copyright 1987 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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