La fin de la famille moderne

Front Cover
UBC Press, May 1, 2009 - Social Science - 512 pages

The family institution is undergoing a radical transformation. The modern meanings of kinship, marriage, parenthood, gender, and sexuality are now being questioned, and debates on same-sex marriages and parenthood or on divorce and blended families are reflective of these challenges.

The (Un)Making of the Modern Family is neither an indictment of the new family nor a rallying cry. It is a classical exercise of family sociology that draws upon a range of disciplines -- history, anthropology, psychology, and demography -- to provide an interpretive model for understanding contemporary changes in the family. It explores traditional family forms in order to identify changes that gave birth to the ideal type of the modern family, and it discusses how the modern family's constituent elements (the family as institution, conjugal and parent-child relationships, and gender and sexuality) relate to modernity's central feature -- the concept of the individual. By reconstructing an archetype of the modern family, this book explains why individuals have experienced its deconstruction as a profound identity crisis. It will appeal to anyone concerned with the future of the (post)modern family and society.

Published originally by Les Presses de l'Universit Laval as La fin de la famille moderne, this book was awarded the 2000-1 Prix Jean-Charles Falardeau for the best book published in French in Canada in the field of social sciences.

 

Contents

1 The Ideal Type of the Modern Family
1
The Domain of Kinship
14
3 The Question of Private and Public Spheres
39
4 The Parental Role
55
5 Gender Gender Differences and Sexuality
73
6 The Conjugal Relationship
103
7 The FrenchCanadian Family
128
What Do They Mean?
142
Epilogue
190
Afterword
192
Notes
201
References
219
Index
229
Copyright

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About the author (2009)

Daniel Dagenais teaches in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at Concordia University. Jane Brierley is a Montreal literary translator, writer, and editor who has won two Governor General's Awards for translation, most recently in 2003 for Marcel Trudel's Memoirs of a Less Travelled Road: A Historian's Life.

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