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Abandoned Children
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 380

Abandoned Children

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1984-01-01
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  • Publisher: SUNY Press

Kind / Fürsorge / Geschichte.

Effusions et tourments, le récit des corps
  • Language: fr
  • Pages: 260

Effusions et tourments, le récit des corps

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2007-03-29
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  • Publisher: Odile Jacob

« C’est le souffle des corps anonymes et peu aisés du XVIIIe siècle qui sera retranscrit ici. Là frissonne quelque chose. Le corps des précaires possède une présence et une actualité qui en disent long sur la vie d’autrefois. Tenter l’approche historique et politique de cette partie matérielle des êtres animés confirme au corps son infinie noblesse, sa capacité à créer avec l’histoire et malgré elle. Cela coûte des rires et des cris, des gestes et des amours, du sang et des chagrins, de la fatigue aussi. Le corps, son histoire et l’histoire ne font qu’un. » A. F. Se fondant notamment sur les archives de police du XVIIIe siècle auxquelles mieux que personne el...

Frenchmen into Peasants
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 410

Frenchmen into Peasants

In considering the pattern of emigration in the context of migration history, Choquette shows that, in many ways, the movement toward Canada occurred as a by-product of other, perennial movements, such as the rural exodus or interurban labor migrations. Overall, emigrants to Canada belonged to an outwardly turned and mobile sector of French society, and their migration took place during a phase of vigorous Atlantic expansion. They crossed the ocean to establish a subsistence economy and peasant society, traces of which lingered on into the twentieth century.

From Housing the Poor to Healing the Sick
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 260

From Housing the Poor to Healing the Sick

The modern concept of the hospital emerged during the first years of the French Revolution as healthcare institutions were transformed from housing for the poor into institutions for the sick. Author John E. Frangos begins this study with an examination of reform efforts and concludes with a review of developments in hospital reform.

A History of Childhood
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 259

A History of Childhood

In this lively and accessible book, Colin Heywood explores the changing experiences and perceptions of childhood from the early Middle Ages to the beginning of the twentieth century. Heywood examines the different ways in which people have thought about childhood as a stage of life, the relationships of children with their families and peers, and the experiences of young people at work, in school and at the hands of various welfare institutions. The aim is to place the history of children and childhood firmly in its social and cultural context, without losing sight of the many individual experiences that have come down to us in diaries, autobiographies and oral testimonies. Heywood argues th...

High Gothic Sculpture at Chartres Cathedral, the Tomb of the Count of Joigny, and the Master of the Warrior Saints
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 215

High Gothic Sculpture at Chartres Cathedral, the Tomb of the Count of Joigny, and the Master of the Warrior Saints

  • Categories: Art

"Re-examines the sculpture on the transept porches of Chartres Cathedral and revises their chronology, based on information from the previously unstudied tomb of the count of Joigny. Documents the production of the monument within the context of French High Gothic sculpture"--Provided by publisher.

Poor and Pregnant in Paris
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 348

Poor and Pregnant in Paris

In their attempt to cope with the daunting problems of poverty and pregnancy, poor women in nineteenth-century France struggled with their environment and in some respects helped shape it. Rachel Fuchs reveals who these women were and how they survived. With dramatic detail, and drawing on actual hospital records and court testimonies, Fuchs portrays poor women's childbirth experiences, their use of charity and welfare, and their recourse to abortion and infanticide as desperate alternatives to motherhood. Fuchs also provides a comprehensive description of philanthropic and welfare institutions, and outlines the relationship between the developing welfare state and official conceptions of wo...

Poverty, Charity, and Motherhood
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 266

Poverty, Charity, and Motherhood

This far-reaching study of maternal societies in post-revolutionary France focuses on the philanthropic work of the Society for Maternal Charity, the most prominent organization of its kind. Administered by middle-class and elite women and financed by powerful families and the government, the Society offered support to poor mothers, helping them to nurse and encouraging them not to abandon their children. In Poverty, Charity, and Motherhood, Christine Adams traces the Society's key role in shaping notions of maternity and in shifting the care of poor families from the hands of charitable volunteers with religious-tinged social visions to paid welfare workers with secular goals such as popula...

The Household and the Making of History
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 314

The Household and the Making of History

This book argues that a unique late marriage pattern, discovered in the 1960s but originating in the Middle Ages, explains the continuing puzzle of why western Europe was the site of changes that, from about 1500, gave rise to the modern world. Contrary to views that credit upheavals from the late eighteenth century were reponsible for ushering in the contemporary global era, it contends that the roots of modern developments themselves are located in an event more than a millennium earlier, when the peasants in northwestern Europe began to marry their daughters almost as late as their sons. The appearance of this late marriage system, with its unstable nuclear household form, will also be shown to have exposed for the first time the common ingredients whose presence has perpetuated beliefs in the importance of gender difference and of a sexual hierarchy favoring males.

A Taste for Comfort and Status
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 306

A Taste for Comfort and Status

The Lamothes were an ordinary family in eighteenth-century Bordeaux. Well-to-do and well respected by their neighbors, they were local notables whose private and public lives suggest the importance of family, kin, and friendship networks, professional activities and cultural interests, as well as a desire to serve the public good. In this portrait of the Lamothes, Christine Adams explores the development of middle-class identity among urban professionals and reconsiders the role of this social group in the coming French Revolution. The most striking feature of this family history is that it is based on more than three hundred personal letters that circulated among the Lamothes&—parents and...