Description
This book 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.
Reviews
Dagenais’ approach seems fruitful to me … notably because it sheds light on something that is paramount. Some of the changes impacting the family might hurt the basic conditions of our own human development: the solidarity between family and community; the future of parental relationship; the difference between genders and generations; and the goal of educational practices.
- Marie-Claude Blais, French philosopher and sociologist