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Looking forward from Ariès? Pictorial and material evidence for the history of childhood and family life
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 January 2009
Abstract
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- Continuity and Change , Volume 4 , Special Issue 2: SPECIAL ISSUE: THE CHILD IN HISTORY , August 1989 , pp. 203 - 229
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- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1989
References
ENDNOTES
1 Stuart, D. M., The boy through the ages (London, 1926).Google Scholar For the iconographic historian this kind of illustrated book can still be of limited use.
2 Wilson, Adrian, ‘The infancy of the history of childhood: an appraisal of Philippe Ariès’, History and Theory 19 (1980) 132.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
3 We can quickly survey the works which have used illustrations. Pinchbeck, Ivy and Hewitt, Margaret, Children in English society, 2 vols. (London, 1969–1973)Google Scholar reproduces 29 illustrations: relevant and interesting, but mostly credited to the Radio Times Hulton Picture Library, without adequate further identification, and insufficiently integrated with the text. Gillis, John R., Youth and history: tradition and change in European age relations 1770 – present (New York, 1974)Google Scholar has five pointedly chosen illustrations used as emblems for each chapter. Shorter, Edward, The making of the modern family (New York, 1975)Google Scholar has 19 illustrations selected and arranged with a polemical intention, and all from picture libraries. Stone, Lawrence, The family, sex and marriage in England 1500–1800 (London, 1977Google Scholar; abridged edition, London, 1979) has 30 illustrations, apparently selected with care, but, as they are mostly English satirical prints, presenting problems of interpretation. Gélis, Jacques, Laget, Mireille, Morel, Marie-France, Entrer dans la vie (Paris, 1978)Google Scholar has 27 well-chosen, unusual and properly identified illustrations. (This was consulted in the German edition, Der Weg ins Leben [Munich, 1980].) Segalen, Marline, Mori et femme dans la société paysanne (Paris, 1980)Google Scholar has very interesting illustrations, as one might expect since the author is a curator at the Musée National des Arts et Traditions Populaires, but they seem curiously unintegrated with the text, at any rate in the English edition, Love and power in the peasant family (Oxford, 1983)Google Scholar which the present writer consulted. Ozment, Steven, When fathers ruled: family life in Reformation Europe (Cambridge, Mass., 1983)Google Scholar draws effectively on a type of pictorial evidence that has already received some scholarly attention: see section VII of the present article. Demos, John, A little commonwealth: family life in Plymouth colony (New York, 1970)Google Scholar is unusual in being deliberately based on material evidence, some of which is illustrated. For the few recent publictions that have dealt usefuly with iconographic evidence, see section II of the present article.
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