1st Edition

The Early Sociology of the Family

Edited By Bryan S. Turner
    3144 Pages
    by Routledge

    The works selected here form a cross-section of the landmarks in the complex and controversial field of family studies in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Featuring writings from eminent sociologists such as Morgan, Starcke, Rivers, Groves, Ogburn and Nimkoff, the collection
    * traces the sociology of the family from its origins in the anthropological study of kinship in the late nineteenth century
    * includes examples of early twentieth century studies on family relations, which propose practical solutions to the problems of domestic breakdown and violence and the emergence of the single parent family
    * illustrates the development of modern family studies with its emphasis on particular family problems and roles.

    Readings in the Anthropology and Sociology of Family and Kinship Bryan S. Turner, Primitive MArriage [1865] John F. McLennan, Ancient Society: Researches in the Lines of Human Progress from Savagery through Barbarism to Civilization [1877] Lewis H. Morgan, The Primitive Family [1889] C.N. Starcke, The Family [1912 (1931)] F. Muller-Lyer, Kinship and Social Organization [1914] W.H.R. Rivers, American Marriage and Family Relations [1928] E.R. Groves and W.F. Ogburn, The Family [1934] M.F. Nimkoff, Predicting Success or Failure in Marriage E.W. Burgess and L.S. Cottrell