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John R. Gillis is the author of Islands of the Mind; A World of Their Own Making: Myth, Ritual, and the Quest for Family Values; and Commemorations. A professor of history emeritus at Rutgers University, he now divides his time between two coasts: Northern California and Maine.

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A thoroughly researched dive into family ritual and meaning, and how Victorian society shaped much of what we deem as "historical." A bit dense with information - not really composed for a general, passive reader.

Recommended for those interested in the history of the family, culture wars, or family values.
 
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alrajul | 1 weitere Rezension | Jun 1, 2023 |
Excellent book, covering the interplay between humans and shorelines over the past 1000 years or so. This book completely changed how I understand costal areas.
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bodhisattva | Dec 21, 2012 |
Lady Wombat says:

Gillis asks readers to recognize the difference between the families that we live “with,” and the families that we live “by” – there are actual social, historical, families, but there are also the culturally constructed visions of families that we all contend with. Gillis examines the cultural construction of the Western family, moving away from biology and sociology, using an anthropological approach. The book’s first section examines the meaning of family in Western Europe before the modern age; the second section relates the changes in said meanings during the Victorian period, and the final section discusses the cultural construction of major family figures in more detail (a chapter each on the “perfect couple”; the mother, the father, and the dead). The book concludes by exploring the present-day implications of past constructions of the family.

The book is filled with fascination information, which gives much food for thought about the things we take as “natural” about families and the way they work. Gillis synthesizes the work of myriad previous scholars to give a clear sense of the vast differences between our present-day understandings of families and the ideas of those in the past. Gillis is less effective in explaining the “whys” behind the shifts that occurred in the construction of the ideological family, but as the first person to take a cultural studies approach to the family, his work can serve as a strong grounding upon which later historians can build.
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Wombat | 1 weitere Rezension | Apr 9, 2009 |

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Werke
10
Mitglieder
186
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#116,758
Bewertung
3.9
Rezensionen
3
ISBNs
24

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