Family in Past Perspective

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19th Century London
Anterior Nasal Spine
archaeological family structure analysis
Bioarchaeology
Blood Lead Concentrations
care provision history
Category=JHM
Category=NKA
child health archaeology
Early Modern Family
Early Modern People
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Familial relationships
Familial Units
Fen Women
Hard Palate
High Infant Mortality
Highest Blood Lead Concentrations
historical childhood studies
interdisciplinary social science
kinship systems
Lead Burdens
Lead Concentrations
Lepromatous Leprosy
Leprosy Hospital
Linear Enamel Hypoplasia
Man Bac
Maternal Nursing
maternal-infant bonds
Non-adult Sample
North Cemetery
Polly Hill
Prospect Hill
Sandy Point
Social networks
Stable Oxygen Isotope Analyses
Wet Nurse
Women's history
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032015101
  • Weight: 360g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 31 May 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This volume takes a more comprehensive view of past familial dynamics than has been previously attempted. By applying interdisciplinary perspectives to periods ranging from the Prehistoric to the Modern, it informs a wider understanding of the term family, and the implications of family dynamics for children and their social networks in the past.

Contributors drawn from across the humanities and social sciences present research addressing three primary themes: modes of kinship and familial structure, the convergence and divergence between the idealised image and realities of family life, and the provision of care within families. These themes are interconnected, as the idea and image of family shapes familial structure, which in turn defines the type of care and protection that families provide to their members. The papers in this volume provide new research to challenge assumptions and provoke new ways of thinking about past families as functionally adaptive, socially connected, and ideologically powerful units of society, just as they are in the present. A broad focus on the networks created by familial units also allows the experiences of historically underrepresented women and children to be highlighted in a way that underlines their interconnectedness with all members of past societies.

The Family in Past Perspective builds a much-needed bridge across disciplinary boundaries. The wide scope of the book hmakes important contributions, and informs fields ranging from bioarchaeology to women's history and childhood studies.

Ellen J. Kendall is a postdoctoral researcher, with recent roles in the Department of Archaeology at Durham University and the EQUIPOL Research Group at the University of York. She serves as the Treasurer for the Society for the Study of Childhood in the Past (SSCIP).

Ross Kendall is an experienced field archaeologist and human osteologist, with a PhD in Archaeology and Anthropology from Durham University. He is the editorial assistant for the journal Antiquity.