scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

The Family and the History of Public Life

Katherine A. Lynch
- 21 Jan 1994 - 
- Vol. 24, Iss: 4, pp 665
TLDR
The family and the history of public life have been studied extensively in the past few decades as mentioned in this paper, with a focus on the family as a mediator between the lives of individuals and larger communities.
Abstract
The Family and the History of Public Life Since the I960s, family history has benefited by adopting some of the problems, concepts, and methods from other disciplines in the human sciences and from other subfields in history. This article argues that family history's interdisciplinary character is likely to continue, and that at least part of its future success will come from dialogue with subfields that are not traditionally associated with family history. The fact that some of the most interesting questions now facing historians of the family lie at the intersection of private and public life is illustrated by exploring families' relations to the larger community in which they live. Although our understanding of how the Western family evolved in the modern period has been marked by an emphasis on the family's increasing privatization, seen from a different approach, there is ample evidence that family life in the West was and is very much a part of the "public sphere" of social life. Consequently, ideologies about the family's role in society, as well as the empirical realities of family life, deserve greater attention from family historians as well as historians of "political culture." Similarly, integrating the history of people who were either temporarily or permanently without families into the agenda of family history promises to give a more realistic, balanced view of the importance of family experience, family roles, and "family values" in the past as well as the present. Using examples from my own and from other recent research, this essay demonstrates how understanding the family as a mediator between the lives of individuals and larger communities promises to help us understand the social history of the Western world in richer detail.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

The industrious revolution: consumer behavior and the household economy, 1650 to the present

TL;DR: A second Industrious Revolution? Appendix I.1. The transformation of consumer desire in the long eighteenth century 2. The origins of the Industrious revolution 3. The Industrial Revolution: the supply of labor 4. The industrial revolution: consumer demand 5. The breadwinner-homemaker household 6.
Journal ArticleDOI

Social network analysis of historical communities: Some questions from the present for the past

TL;DR: The usefulness of using a social network analytic approach to studying communities and community-like social structures such as kinship groups and work groups has been discussed in this paper, where the authors suggest the usefulness of such an approach to the study of community.
Dissertation

Renovating masculinity: urban men’s experiences and emergent masculinity models in Ðổi mới Vietnam

Philip Martin
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide an in-depth ethnographic case study of the ways in which a small group of young, urban, educated, heterosexual Vietnamese men have made sense of themselves "as men" in relation to cultural, economic and social change in Vietnam over the past twenty-five years.