Research Catalog

Family matters : a history of ideas about family since 1945 / Michael Peplar.

Title
Family matters : a history of ideas about family since 1945 / Michael Peplar.
Author
Peplar, Michael
Publication
London ; New York : Longman, 2002.

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TextRequest in advance HQ613 .P47 2002Off-site

Details

Description
x, 180 p. : ill.; 24 cm.
Summary
"The family is now the subject of constant debate - private and public - in contemporary Europe. Family Matters is the first book to chart the history of family in Britain from the end of the Second World War to the beginning of the twenty-first century. The book traces the history of postwar debates and policy about family, and offers insights into the dramatically different current arguments about the family and gender relations. In the 1940s and 1950s ideas about the family were firmly rooted in nation and race. Subsequently, governments have been concerned about the fate of nuclear families while people's concerns often laid with the loosening of extended family ties. Family Matters points up the percurrent discrepancies between the 'official' version of the family and the actual more complicated experience of everyday life." "This is more than a simple history of family life, though. Taking an innovative approach, Family Matters works on three different levels: analysis of official policy and debate; the representation of family in popular culture, especially film; and the experience of family as remembered in a set of fresh oral histories." "Family Matters is vital reading for anyone who wants to understand the seismic changes in the shape of the family over the last 50 years."--BOOK JACKET.
Series Statement
Women and men in history
Uniform Title
Women and men in history
Subject
  • Geschichte 1945-2001
  • 1900-1999
  • Families > Great Britain > History > 20th century
  • Families > Great Britain > 20th century
Genre/Form
History
Bibliography (note)
  • Includes bibliographical references and index.
Processing Action (note)
  • committed to retain
Contents
1. Introduction: The idea of the family -- 2. 'Family planning': Families, policy and the law -- 3. Families, charities and local authorities -- 4. 'Family viewing': Family, popular culture, representation -- 5. 'Relatively speaking': Family, experience, memory -- 6. Conclusions -- 7. Postscript: New families? From the permissive moment to the present -- App. Questions for semi-structured oral history interview.
ISBN
0582418704
OCLC
  • 48416798
  • SCSB-11348791
Owning Institutions
Harvard Library