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1.
Hist Sci Med ; 48(2): 245-50, 2014.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25230531

ABSTRACT

Franz Liszt's eldest daughter, Blandine Ollivier, died at the age of 26, two months after the birth of her son Daniel. The reasons of that death remain obscure. There are contradictions between the asserted good health of Blandine during her pregnancy and what was learnt later on through the publication in French of Richard Wagner's autobiography. He was the husband of Cosima who was herself Blandine's sister. We put forward some hypotheses that can be discussed; Blandine would have contracted a serious anemia of pregnancy, unknown, with a streptococcus septicemia in post partum; no sign or symptom in consideration of mastitis carcinosis.


Subject(s)
Nuclear Family/history , Puerperal Infection/history , Streptococcal Infections/history , Famous Persons , Female , France , History, 19th Century , Humans , Hungary , Music , Pregnancy
2.
Ger Life Lett ; 64(4): 489-500, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22165165

ABSTRACT

The relationship between father and son is a highly nuanced and persistent theme in Goethe's late novel Wilhelm Meisters Wanderjahre, but has received relatively little critical attention. Drawing on various aspects of the text, from the relationship between Wilhelm and his own son Felix, to the theme of migration from the 'fatherland', this essay contends that the relationship of the younger generation to the older traces a pattern of departure and return. The development in the son of an identity distinct and independent from that of the father is a preoccupation of the earlier chapters of the Wanderjahre in particular; but this process of individuation tends to be accompanied in the novel by continued, even increased, identification with the father, which may be conscious or unconscious. All the various stages of this fluctuating relationship are telescoped into a few rich, enigmatic images in the novel's closing scene, in which the threat of separation and the desire for proximity are held in suspension.


Subject(s)
Nuclear Family , Parent-Child Relations , Population Dynamics , Socioeconomic Factors , Emigrants and Immigrants/education , Emigrants and Immigrants/history , Emigrants and Immigrants/legislation & jurisprudence , Emigrants and Immigrants/psychology , Fathers/education , Fathers/history , Fathers/legislation & jurisprudence , Fathers/psychology , Germany/ethnology , History, 19th Century , Nuclear Family/ethnology , Nuclear Family/history , Nuclear Family/psychology , Parent-Child Relations/ethnology , Parent-Child Relations/legislation & jurisprudence , Population Dynamics/history , Social Change/history , Social Identification , Socioeconomic Factors/history
3.
AJR Am J Roentgenol ; 197(5): W829-36, 2011 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22021529

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to use MDCT to examine two mummies found in the tomb of King Tutankhamun to estimate their gestational ages at mummification, to determine the mummification method, and to investigate the congenital deformities of one of the mummies that had been suspected at previous medical examinations. MATERIALS AND METHODS: MDCT was performed on the mummies of the daughters of King Tutankhamun (article numbers 317a and 317b), and the images were reconstructed and subjected to forensic imaging analysis. RESULTS: The gestational ages at mummification of mummies 317a and 317b were estimated to be approximately 24.7 and 36.78 weeks. The skeletal congenital anomalies of mummy 317b suggested at past radiographic analysis were ruled out. CONCLUSION: The results of this study may set a precedent for use of CT and forensic image analysis in the study of ancient mummified fetuses.


Subject(s)
Fetus/diagnostic imaging , Mummies/diagnostic imaging , Tomography, X-Ray Computed/methods , Archaeology , Female , History, Ancient , Humans , Imaging, Three-Dimensional , Nuclear Family/history
4.
Am J Phys Anthropol ; 146(3): 406-13, 2011 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21959902

ABSTRACT

Ancient populations have commonly been thought to have lived in small groups where extreme endogamy was the norm. To contribute to this debate, a genetic analysis has been carried out on a collective burial with eight primary inhumations from Montanissell Cave in the Catalan pre-Pyrenees. Radiocarbon dating clearly placed the burial in the Bronze Age, around 3200 BP. The composition of the group-two adults (one male, one female), one young woman, and five children from both sexes-seemed to represent the structure of a typical nuclear family. The genetic evidence proves this assumption to be wrong. In fact, at least five out of the eight mitochondrial haplotypes were different, denying the possibility of a common maternal ancestor for all of them. Nevertheless, 50% of the inhumations shared haplogroup J, so the possibility of a maternal relationship cannot be ruled out. Actually, combining different analyses performed using ancient and living populations, the probability of having four related J individuals in Montanissell Cave would range from 0.9884 to 0.9999. Owing to the particularities of this singular collective burial (small number of bodies placed altogether in a hidden cave, the evidence of non-simultaneous interments, close dating and unusual grave goods), we suggest that it might represent a small group with a patrilocal mating system.


Subject(s)
Caves , Cemeteries , DNA, Mitochondrial/genetics , Nuclear Family/history , Adolescent , Adult , Anthropology, Physical , Archaeology , Bayes Theorem , Bone and Bones/chemistry , Child , DNA/genetics , Female , Haplotypes/genetics , History, Ancient , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Polymerase Chain Reaction , Polymorphism, Restriction Fragment Length , Radiometric Dating , Spain , Tooth/chemistry
5.
J Fam Hist ; 36(3): 248-62, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21898961

ABSTRACT

In this article, the author explains how the support of new technologies has helped historians to develop their research over the last few decades. The author, therefore, summarizes the application of both database and genealogical programs for the southern Europe family studies as a methodological tool. First, the author will establish the importance of the creation of databases using the File Maker program, after which they will explain the value of using genealogical programs such as Genopro and Heredis. The main aim of this article is to give detail about the use of these new technologies as applied to a particular study of southern Europe, specifically the Crown of Castile, during the late modern period. The use of these computer programs has helped to develop the field of social sciences and family history, in particular, social history, during the last decade.


Subject(s)
Family , Genealogy and Heraldry , Life Change Events , Nuclear Family , Social Support , Technology , Europe/ethnology , Family/ethnology , Family/history , Family/psychology , Family Characteristics/ethnology , Family Characteristics/history , Family Health/ethnology , Family Relations/ethnology , Family Relations/legislation & jurisprudence , Historiography , History, 18th Century , Life Change Events/history , Nuclear Family/ethnology , Nuclear Family/history , Nuclear Family/psychology , Social Values/ethnology , Social Values/history , Technology/education , Technology/history
6.
J Law Soc ; 38(2): 245-71, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21913363

ABSTRACT

This paper reports on the findings from a large-scale study of public attitudes to inheritance law, particularly the rules on intestacy. It argues that far from the assumption that the family' is in terminal decline, people in England and Wales still view their most important relationships, at least for the purposes of inheritance law, as centred on a narrow, nuclear family model. However, there is also widespread acceptance of re-partnering and cohabitation, producing generally high levels of support for including cohabitants in the intestacy rules and for ensuring that children from former relationships are protected. We argue that these views are underpinned by a continuing sense of responsibility to the members of one's nuclear family, arising from notions of sharing and commitment, dependency and support, and a sense of lineage.


Subject(s)
Cultural Characteristics , Family Relations , Nuclear Family , Social Change , Social Responsibility , Wills , Cultural Characteristics/history , England/ethnology , Expressed Emotion , Family/ethnology , Family/history , Family/psychology , Family Relations/ethnology , Family Relations/legislation & jurisprudence , History, 18th Century , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Nuclear Family/ethnology , Nuclear Family/history , Nuclear Family/psychology , Social Change/history , Social Values/ethnology , Social Values/history , Wales/ethnology , Wills/economics , Wills/ethnology , Wills/history , Wills/legislation & jurisprudence , Wills/psychology
7.
Luzif Amor ; 24(47): 40-5, 2011.
Article in German | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21598590

ABSTRACT

This article outlines the development of a research project initiated by the discovery of new material: a set of letters, written by Mathilde, Freud's eldest daughter, to Eugen Pachmayr, a doctor's son from Munich. On the face of it, these letters do not actually answer the question whether the two young people were in love. But the answer could be found elsewhere.


Subject(s)
Correspondence as Topic/history , Freudian Theory , Love , Nuclear Family/history , Psychoanalysis/history , Austria , Germany , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans
8.
Cult Anthropol ; 26(1): 112-37, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21510329

ABSTRACT

This article examines suicide prevention among children in India's "suicide capital" of Kerala to interrogate the ways temporalization practices inform the cultivation of ethical, life-avowing subjects in late capitalism. As economic liberalization and migration expand consumer aspiration in Kerala, mental health experts link the quickening of material gratification in middle-class parenting to the production of insatiable, maladjusted, and impulsively suicidal children. Experiences of accelerated time through consumption in "modern" Kerala parenting practice reflect ideas about the threats of globalization that are informed both by national economic shifts and by nostalgia for the state's communist and developmentalist histories, suggesting that late capitalism's time­space compression is not a universalist phenomenon so much as one that is unevenly experienced through regionally specific renderings of the past. I demonstrate how experts position the Malayali child as uniquely vulnerable to the fatal dangers of immediate gratification, and thus exhort parents to retemporalize children through didactic games built around the deferral of desires for everyday consumer items. Teaching children how to wait as a pleasurable and explicitly antisuicidal way of being reveals anxieties, contestations, and contradictions concerning what ought to constitute "quality" investment in children as temporal subjects of late capitalism. The article concludes by bringing efforts to save elite lives into conversation with suicide prevention among migrants to draw out the ways distinct vulnerabilities and conditions of precarity situate waiting subjects in radically different ways against the prospect of self-destruction.


Subject(s)
Family Health , Parent-Child Relations , Preventive Psychiatry , Socioeconomic Factors , Suicide , Family Health/ethnology , Family Relations/ethnology , Family Relations/legislation & jurisprudence , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Humans , India/ethnology , Nuclear Family/ethnology , Nuclear Family/history , Nuclear Family/psychology , Parent-Child Relations/ethnology , Parent-Child Relations/legislation & jurisprudence , Parenting/ethnology , Parenting/history , Parenting/psychology , Population Groups/education , Population Groups/ethnology , Population Groups/history , Population Groups/legislation & jurisprudence , Population Groups/psychology , Preventive Psychiatry/education , Preventive Psychiatry/history , Social Class/history , Social Conditions/economics , Social Conditions/history , Social Conditions/legislation & jurisprudence , Socioeconomic Factors/history , Suicide/economics , Suicide/ethnology , Suicide/history , Suicide/legislation & jurisprudence , Suicide/psychology
9.
Popul Dev Rev ; 37(4): 665-90, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22319769

ABSTRACT

This article draws on a survey conducted in six provinces in summer 2008 to investigate the determinants of son preference in rural China. The analysis confirms the conventional wisdom that son preference is embedded within patrilineal family structures and practices. We extend our analysis by exploring specific aspects of variation within patrilineal family culture. We find that the patrilineal group (clan) composition of villages and family participation in practices such as building ancestral halls and updating genealogies significantly influence son preference. Yet even though son preference is embedded within patrilineal family culture, our analysis suggests that over time the attenuation of son preference is likely. This is because determinants associated with socioeconomic change­for instance, higher levels of education, direct exposure to official policy education materials, higher income (a proxy for rural industrialization), and agricultural mechanization­all attenuate son preference. Being younger and female are also associated with weaker son preference, and both characteristics are likely to interact with education and industrialization to further dilute son preference in the longer term. Nevertheless, our findings suggest that concerted efforts are needed to ameliorate institutional discrimination against rural people in welfare provisioning and in labor markets, and to promote multiple dimensions of gender equality, including in land rights, wage rates, and education.


Subject(s)
Cultural Characteristics , Family Characteristics , Nuclear Family , Rural Population , Socioeconomic Factors , China/ethnology , Cultural Characteristics/history , Education/economics , Education/history , Education/legislation & jurisprudence , Family/ethnology , Family/history , Family/psychology , Family Characteristics/ethnology , Family Characteristics/history , Gender Identity , History, 21st Century , Income/history , Nuclear Family/ethnology , Nuclear Family/history , Nuclear Family/psychology , Ownership/economics , Ownership/history , Ownership/legislation & jurisprudence , Rural Health/ethnology , Rural Health/history , Rural Population/history , Socioeconomic Factors/history
10.
J Fam Hist ; 35(4): 311-28, 2010.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21105492

ABSTRACT

This article explores the living arrangements and familial relations of small business households in northwest English towns between 1760 and 1820. Focusing on evidence from inventories and personal writing, it examines the homes that such households lived and worked in and the ways in which space was ordered and used: indicating that access to particular spaces was determined by status. This study suggests both the continuance of the "household family" into the nineteenth century (rather than its more modern, "nuclear" variant) and the existence of keenly felt gradations of status within households making it likely that the constitution of "the family" differed according to one's place in the domestic hierarchy.


Subject(s)
Commerce , Employment , Family Characteristics , Household Work , Nuclear Family , Commerce/economics , Commerce/education , Commerce/history , Correspondence as Topic/history , Employment/economics , Employment/history , Employment/psychology , Family/ethnology , Family/history , Family Characteristics/ethnology , Family Characteristics/history , Hierarchy, Social/history , History, 18th Century , History, 19th Century , Household Work/history , Housing/history , Nuclear Family/ethnology , Nuclear Family/history , United Kingdom/ethnology
11.
Sociol Inq ; 80(4): 579-604, 2010.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20879178

ABSTRACT

There is a large body of research that shows children from non-intact homes show higher rates of juvenile delinquency than children from intact homes, partially due to weaker parental control and supervision in non-intact homes. What has not been adequately addressed in the research is the influence of changes in family structure among individual adolescents over time on delinquent offending. Using the first and third waves of the National Youth Study, we assess the effect of family structure changes on changes in delinquent offending between waves through the intermediate process of changes in family time and parental attachment. Although prior research has documented adolescents in broken homes are more delinquent than youth in intact homes, the process of family dissolution is not associated with concurrent increases in offending. In contrast, family formation through marriage or cohabitation is associated with simultaneous increases in offending. Changes in family time and parental attachment account for a portion of the family formation effect on delinquency, and prior parental attachment and juvenile offending significantly condition the effect of family formation on offending.


Subject(s)
Adolescent Behavior , Family Conflict , Juvenile Delinquency , Parent-Child Relations , Single-Parent Family , Adolescent , Adolescent Behavior/ethnology , Adolescent Behavior/history , Adolescent Behavior/physiology , Adolescent Behavior/psychology , Family Characteristics/ethnology , Family Characteristics/history , Family Conflict/economics , Family Conflict/ethnology , Family Conflict/history , Family Conflict/legislation & jurisprudence , Family Conflict/psychology , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Humans , Jurisprudence/history , Juvenile Delinquency/economics , Juvenile Delinquency/ethnology , Juvenile Delinquency/history , Juvenile Delinquency/legislation & jurisprudence , Juvenile Delinquency/psychology , Nuclear Family/ethnology , Nuclear Family/history , Nuclear Family/psychology , Parent-Child Relations/ethnology , Parent-Child Relations/legislation & jurisprudence , Parenting/ethnology , Parenting/history , Parenting/psychology , Psychology, Adolescent/economics , Psychology, Adolescent/education , Psychology, Adolescent/history , Psychology, Adolescent/legislation & jurisprudence , Single-Parent Family/ethnology , Single-Parent Family/psychology
12.
J Balt Stud ; 41(4): 531-51, 2010.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21280385

ABSTRACT

This article explores young women's orientation to work and motherhood in the post-communist context of radical socio-economic transformation in Europe. Based on a qualitative-explorative study into meanings of work and unemployment among young people in post-Soviet Lithuania, the paper introduces an empirically grounded classification of imagined gender-work arrangements. The single patterns of the classification are based on the three configurations of work and motherhood, work and partnership, and work and provision. The findings inform the reconstruction of the 'landscape' of imagined gendered adulthoods in Europe as well as the analysis of emerging gender relations under conditions of rapid social change.


Subject(s)
Gender Identity , Nuclear Family , Residence Characteristics , Socioeconomic Factors , Unemployment , Women , Employment/economics , Employment/history , Employment/legislation & jurisprudence , Employment/psychology , Family/ethnology , Family/history , Family/psychology , Family Relations/ethnology , Family Relations/legislation & jurisprudence , Female , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Humans , Lithuania/ethnology , Nuclear Family/ethnology , Nuclear Family/history , Nuclear Family/psychology , Residence Characteristics/history , Socioeconomic Factors/history , Unemployment/history , Unemployment/psychology , Women/education , Women/history , Women/psychology , Women's Health/ethnology , Women's Health/history , Women's Rights/economics , Women's Rights/education , Women's Rights/history , Women's Rights/legislation & jurisprudence , Young Adult
13.
J South Afr Stud ; 36(4): 833-49, 2010.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21280394

ABSTRACT

During 2008, rumours about revolting incestuous encounters between sons and their mothers circulated in the Bushbuckridge municipality of the South African lowveld. This article views these rumours as expressing moral panic, paying particular attention to the historical contexts of their emergence and circulation, and to their temporal orientation. I locate these rumours in the periphery of South Africa's de-industrialising economy, marked by increased unemployment and criminality among men and by a growing prominence of women-headed households. They express a regressive temporalisation and pessimistic vision, not of development, progress and civilisation, but rather of deterioration and de-civilisation. Through the alleged act of incest, sons who engage in crime usurp the authority of fathers who once produced value in strategic industries and mines. As such the rumours envision a dystopia marked by the 'death of the father' and chaotic disorder without morality and law.


Subject(s)
Family Health , Incest , Morals , Parent-Child Relations , Social Problems , Socioeconomic Factors , Criminals/education , Criminals/history , Criminals/legislation & jurisprudence , Criminals/psychology , Family Health/ethnology , Family Relations/ethnology , Family Relations/legislation & jurisprudence , History, 21st Century , Humans , Incest/economics , Incest/ethnology , Incest/history , Incest/legislation & jurisprudence , Incest/psychology , Nuclear Family/ethnology , Nuclear Family/history , Nuclear Family/psychology , Parent-Child Relations/ethnology , Parent-Child Relations/legislation & jurisprudence , Single-Parent Family/ethnology , Single-Parent Family/psychology , Social Class/history , Social Problems/economics , Social Problems/ethnology , Social Problems/history , Social Problems/legislation & jurisprudence , Social Problems/psychology , Socioeconomic Factors/history , South Africa/ethnology , Unemployment/history , Unemployment/psychology
14.
J Dev Stud ; 46(10): 1786-1805, 2010.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21280415

ABSTRACT

Why is it that couples who have a son or whose last child is a son earn higher conditional income? To solve this curious case we tell a detective story: evidence of a phenomenon to be explained, a parade of suspects, a process of elimination from the enquiry, and then the denouement. Given the draconian family planning policy and a common perception that there is strong son preference in rural China, we postulate two main hypotheses: income-based sex selection making it more likely that richer households have sons, and an incentive for households with sons to raise their income. Tests of each hypothesis are conducted. Taken as a whole, the tests cannot reject either hypothesis but they tend to favour the incentive hypothesis; and there is evidence in support of the channels through which the incentive effect might operate. To our knowledge, this is the first study to test these hypotheses against each other in rural China and more generally in developing countries.


Subject(s)
Family Planning Policy , Income , Nuclear Family , Rural Population , Social Mobility , China/ethnology , Family/ethnology , Family/history , Family/psychology , Family Characteristics/ethnology , Family Characteristics/history , Family Planning Policy/economics , Family Planning Policy/history , Family Planning Policy/legislation & jurisprudence , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Income/history , Nuclear Family/ethnology , Nuclear Family/history , Nuclear Family/psychology , Rural Health/history , Rural Population/history , Social Conditions/economics , Social Conditions/history , Social Conditions/legislation & jurisprudence , Social Mobility/economics , Social Mobility/history , Socioeconomic Factors/history
15.
Soc Serv Rev ; 84(4): 655-77, 2010.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21488323

ABSTRACT

With dramatic growth in nonrmarital births, an increasing number of children are growing up in single-mother families. This study examines the relationships among nonresident fathers' parenting and children's behavioral and cognitive development in low-income, single-mother families. It also considers the personal characteristics of the children's single mothers as well as family processes and economic circumstances. Analyses use the first three waves of longitudinal data from a subsample of single and noncohabiting mothers in the Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Study. Results suggest that nonresident fathers' parenting is indirectly associated with children's behavior problems and cognitive development. The findings further suggest that those estimated associations are transmitted through mothers' parenting. The study also discusses the policy and practice implications of its findings.


Subject(s)
Child Welfare , Parenting , Poverty , Single-Parent Family , Social Problems , Urban Population , Child Development , Child Welfare/economics , Child Welfare/ethnology , Child Welfare/history , Child Welfare/legislation & jurisprudence , Child Welfare/psychology , Child, Preschool , Family Characteristics/ethnology , Family Characteristics/history , Family Health/ethnology , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Humans , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Nuclear Family/ethnology , Nuclear Family/history , Nuclear Family/psychology , Parenting/ethnology , Parenting/history , Parenting/psychology , Poverty/economics , Poverty/ethnology , Poverty/history , Poverty/legislation & jurisprudence , Poverty/psychology , Single-Parent Family/ethnology , Single-Parent Family/psychology , Social Class/history , Social Problems/economics , Social Problems/ethnology , Social Problems/history , Social Problems/legislation & jurisprudence , Social Problems/psychology , Socioeconomic Factors/history , United States/ethnology , Urban Population/history
16.
Arctic Anthropol ; 42(2): 66-81, 2005.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21847838

ABSTRACT

Public policy practices in the Canadian North, particularly those connected to housing and employment, are encouraging a reorganization of Inuit social organization to more closely resemble the insular and independent nuclear family household idealized by Eurocanadians. This has wide-ranging implications for the social stability of northern communities without sufficient employment opportunities. The paper examines the symbolic and structural effects of housing policies and employment on culturally valued social practices such as sharing in Holman, a community in the Inuvialuit Settlement Region of the Northwest Territories of Canada.


Subject(s)
Employment , Housing , Inuit , Nuclear Family , Public Policy , Social Support , Canada/ethnology , Employment/economics , Employment/history , Employment/legislation & jurisprudence , Employment/psychology , Family Health/ethnology , Government Programs/economics , Government Programs/education , Government Programs/history , Government Programs/legislation & jurisprudence , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Household Work/economics , Household Work/history , Household Work/legislation & jurisprudence , Housing/economics , Housing/history , Housing/legislation & jurisprudence , Humans , Inuit/education , Inuit/ethnology , Inuit/history , Inuit/legislation & jurisprudence , Inuit/psychology , Northwest Territories/ethnology , Nuclear Family/ethnology , Nuclear Family/history , Nuclear Family/psychology , Public Policy/economics , Public Policy/history , Public Policy/legislation & jurisprudence , Residence Characteristics/history
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