Cynthia Comacchio - Böcker
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2 produkter
2 produkter
531 kr
Skickas inom 11-20 vardagar
""So often a long-awaited book is disappointing. Happily such is not the case with Sutherland's masterpiece."" Robert M. Stamp, University of Calgary, in The Canadian Historical Review ""Sutherland's work is destined to be a landmark in Canadian history, both as a first in its particular field and as a standard reference text."" J. Stewart Hardy, University of Alberta, in Alberta Journal of Educational Research Such were the reviewers' comments when Neil Sutherland's groundbreaking book was first published. Now reissued in Wilfrid Laurier University Press's new series ""Studies in Childhood and Family in Canada,"" with a new introduction by series editor Cynthia Comacchio, this book remains relevant today. In the late nineteenth century a new generation of reformers committed itself to a program of social improvement based on the more effective upbringing of all children. In Children in English-Canadian Society, Neil Sutherland examines, with a keen eye, the growth of the public health movement and its various efforts at improving the health of children.
490 kr
Skickas inom 10-15 vardagar
Adolescence, like childhood, is more than a biologically defined life stage: it is also a sociohistorical construction. The meaning and experience of adolescence are reformulated according to societal needs, evolving scientific precepts, and national aspirations relative to historic conditions. Although adolescence was by no means a ""discovery"" of the early twentieth century, it did assume an identifiably modern form during the years between the Great War and 1950. The Dominion of Youth: Adolescence and the Making of Modern Canada, 1920 to 1950 captures what it meant for young Canadians to inhabit this liminal stage of life within the context of a young nation caught up in the self-formation and historic transformation that would make modern Canada. Because the young at this time were seen paradoxically as both the hope of the nation and the source of its possible degeneration, new policies and institutions were developed to deal with the ""problem of youth."" This history considers how young Canadians made the transition to adulthood during a period that was ""developmental"" - both for youth and for a nation also working toward individuation. During the years considered here, those who occupied this ""dominion"" of youth would see their experiences more clearly demarcated by generation and culture than ever before. With this book, Cynthia Comacchio offers the first detailed study of adolescence in early-twentieth-century Canada and demonstrates how young Canadians of the period became the nation's first modern teenagers.