The American family in social-historical perspective.
Material type:
- 031202312
- 301.42/0973
- HQ535 .G66 1973
Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Non-fiction | Main | HMBGor (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 2 | Available | |
Non-fiction | Main Non Fiction | HMB Gor (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available |
Laslett, P. The comparative history of household and family.--Berkner, L. K. The stem family and the development cycle of the peasant household.--Anderson, M. Family, household, and the industrial revolution.--Greven, P. J., jr. Family structure in seventeenth-century Andover, Mass.--Farber, B. Family and community structure: Salem in 1800.--Sennett, R. Middle-class families and urban violence.--McLaughlin, V. Y. Patterns of work and family organization.--Pleck, E. H. The two-parent household.--Demos, J. Infancy and childhood in the Plymouth colony.--Rapson, R. L. The American child as seen by British travelers, 1845-1935.--Demos, J. and V. Adolescence in historical perspective.--Welter, B. The cult of true womanhood: 1820-1860.--O'Neill, W. L. Divorce in the progressive era.--Jensen, R. Family, career, and reform.--Morgan, E. S. The Puritans and sex.--Shorter, E. Illegitimacy, sexual revolution.--Barker-Benfield, B. The spermatic economy.--Grabill, W. H., Kiser, C. V., and Whelpton, P. K. A long view.--Smith, D. S. The demographic history of Colonial New England.--Selected bibliography (p. 417-421)