The Stem Family in Eurasian Perspective
Revisiting House Societies, 17th-20th centuries
Is the Asian stem family different from its European counterpart? This question is a central issue in this collection of essays assembled by two historians of the family in Eurasian perspective. The stem family is characterized by the residential rule that only one married child remains with the parents. This rule has a direct effect upon household structure. In short, the stem family is a domestic unit of production and reproduction that persists over generations, handing down the patrimony through non-egalitarian inheritance. In spite of its ambiguous status in current family typology as something lurking in the valley between the nuclear f…
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Produktdetails
Weitere Autoren: Ochiai, Emiko (Hrsg.)
- ISBN: 978-3-03911-739-0
- EAN: 9783039117390
- Produktnummer: 19680873
- Verlag: Lang, Peter
- Sprache: Englisch
- Erscheinungsjahr: 2009
- Seitenangabe: 558 S.
- Masse: H22.3 cm x B15.4 cm x D3.5 cm 897 g
- Abbildungen: 10 ill., num. tables and graphs
- Gewicht: 897
Über den Autor
The Editors: Antoinette Fauve-Chamoux is Maître de Conférences at Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales (EHESS), Centre de Recherches Historiques/CNRS, Paris (France), where she teaches History of the Family. She was a researcher at the Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw, associate Professor at University of Montréal, Canada, and is currently honorary Professor at National University of Salta, Argentina. As a social historian and historical demographer, she has edited several books and published numerous essays on the history of the family, Malthusianism, female migration, gender studies and social change in Europe, and comparative family transmission systems in Eurasia. Emiko Ochiai is Professor of Sociology at the Graduate School of Letters, Kyoto University. She was an Associate Professor at the International Research Center for Japanese Studies in Kyoto and was a visiting research fellow at the Cambridge Group for the History of Population and Social Structure. Her major research field is the historical and comparative sociology of the family and gender. Her book The Japanese Family System in Transition. A Sociological Analysis of Family Change in Postwar Japan was published in Japanese in 1994 and translated into Korean, Chinese and English.
3 weitere Werke von Antoinette (Hrsg.) Fauve-Chamoux:
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