Families, Marriages, and Children

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A01=Charlotte Perkins Gilman
androcentric
Author_Charlotte Perkins Gilman
Category=JBSF1
Category=JHBK
culture
domestic
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eq_society-politics
Essential Error
Father's Father's Father
Father’s Father’s Father
feminist analysis of family structure
feminist sociology
Filial Duty
Free Women
gender inequality
Girl Friend
Gold Stones
Honor Thy Father
Industrial Evolution
industry
Isolated Building
Large Families
Low Grade Man
Mankind
Men Kind
Michael R. Hill
Modern Family
Mother's Mother's Father
motherhood studies
Mother’s Mother’s Father
patriarchy critique
Proper Problems
Proprietary Family
social parenting
women's social roles
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138510036
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 06 Oct 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Charlotte Perkins Gilman (1860-1935) was a pioneering sociologist, feminist pragmatist, author, and lecturer. A skilled and perceptive writer, she explained sociological concepts and principles clearly and concisely to popular audiences. This volume presents a focused and provocative set of Gilman's penetrating analyses of marriage, motherhood, and family relationships. Generally unavailable, except in archives and special libraries, the lion's share of the analyses are drawn directly from Gilman's quintessentially unique self-published journal, The Forerunner.

Transcending her era, Gilman speaks with wit, insight, and candor to twenty-first century readers about many controversial aspects of family and family life. She believes deeply that women's values regeneration, cooperation, and compassion make for better societies. Men's values, she concludes, are destructive, competitive, and often violent. Families produce double standards and inequalities between husbands and wives, resulting in inferior mothers and, as a direct consequence, in substandard children. To improve society, Gilman argues, we need healthy, happy children. This requires well-trained, competent mothers, widespread social parenting, and enlightened, non-patriarchal marriages.

Largely self-taught, Gilman supported herself through writing and lecturing. She was at one time a settlement house leader and an active member of the American Sociological Society. Her wide sociological circle included lasting friendships with Jane Addams, Edward A. Ross, and Lester F. Ward.

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