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Reproducing Families

Reproducing Families

Reproducing Families

The Political Economy of English Population History
David P. Levine
August 1987
Available
Paperback
9780521337854
£30.99
GBP
Paperback

    Reviewing the course of English population history from 1066 to the eighties, this book challenges orthodoxies about the evolution of English family forms, and offers a bold interpretation of the inter-connections between social, economic, demographic and family history. Taking as the point of departure the well-known observations that England was the first industrial society, that it was the first society to have its peasantry replaced by proletarians and that it was a society that was always dominated by nuclear family households, the main question David Levine asks is how these elements were connected in time and space. In answering this, he looks to contemporaneous changes in the labour process, and, in particular, to the disposition of labour within the family. His central theme is the impact of proletarianisation on family formation. He argues that the explosive transformations of family and demography that occurred between 1780 and 1815 were the culmination of a protracted transition from a feudal to a capitalist social structure; and that the post-1870 decline in marital fertility took place within a context of demographic, familial, social and political adjustments which were themselves a response to the earlier population explosion.

    Product details

    August 1987
    Paperback
    9780521337854
    264 pages
    229 × 152 × 15 mm
    0.39kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Preface
    • Introduction: production and reproduction
    • 1. Feudalism and the peasant family
    • 2. Agrarian capitalism and rural proletarianisation
    • 3. The industrialisation of the cottage economy
    • 4. The decline of working-class fertility
    • Reprise
    • Notes
    • Index.
      Author
    • David P. Levine