Family in the Modern Age

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A01=Brigitte Berger
Author_Brigitte Berger
Brigitte Berger
Category=JHBK
Christopher Lash
Comfortable Concentration Camp
Common Human Pattern
Comparative Cultural Advantage
Conjugal Nuclear Family
contemporary family structure debates
conventional
Conventional Family
Conventional Family Life
Conventional Nuclear Family
Countercultural Revolution
Covenant Marriage
demographic transitions
DNA Code
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
gender roles research
Good Life
Hum Drum
Human Suffering
liberal democracy studies
life
Mao Tse Tung
marriage and society
Matriarchal Origin
Modern Family
Modern Nuclear Family
Modern Social Order
nuclear
Out-of Home Care
post-World War Ii Migration
Proto-industrial Family
social institutions analysis
sociology of family
Vice Versa
Welfare Reform
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780765801210
  • Weight: 300g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 31 May 2002
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Many argue that the modern family is an anachronistic institution whose demise is only a question of time. Looking to the family's future, the eminent sociologist Brigitte Berger argues that despite being weakened and embattled, the family will survive as a fundamental social institution. The family has been the cradle of the modern social order for some three hundred years, and will remain the basis for any society concerned with happiness, liberty, equality, and prosperity for all its members. Rather than being condemned to the dust heap of history, or becoming a simple lifestyle choice, the modern family has a number of enduring strengths that will ensure its survival. In The Family in the Modern Age, Berger focuses on four major areas of concern. First, she demonstrates that the short shrift given to the institutional dimension of the family misrepresents the importance and the role of the family today. Second, she documents the close cognitive fit between core elements of the modern family and the stability of modern society, and argues that any society that ignores this connection does so at its own peril. Third, Berger investigates the degree to which currently identified problems may endanger the modern family's vital individual and social functions. And finally, she develops reasonable projections of the future of the family that will be core elements contributing to the creation of a politically democratic and economically prosperous world. Berger takes a long-range view of "the career" of the conventional family in the twentieth century. Her perspective is distinctly different from that widespread in scholarly literature today. She takes account of recent demographic shifts in behavior relating to sexuality, marriage, family structure and values, relationships, and family functions. Berger considers hotly contested contemporary issues relating to the family-gay marriage, divorce, abortion, women and work, issues of child-care, among others. But she concludes that despite the industrial system's numerous permutations and the far-reaching social adjustments they have exacted, the norms peculiar to the modern family are likely to remain the core feature of any dynamic liberal democratic social order organized around the market. The Family in the Modern Age will be of central interest to professionals as well as a general public concerned with the current debate over the role of the family in modern society.

Brigitte Berger, presently a professor emerita, has been professor of sociology at Long Island University, Wellesley College, and Boston University. She is author of Societies in Change, and co-author with Peter L. Berger of Sociology: A Biographical Approach, The Homeless Mind: Modernization and Consciousness, and The War over the Family.

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