The family properly defined "nuclear" is a cultural construction resulting in the Enlightenment, the bourgeois revolutions at the end of '700 and in the end of the Age historiographically called "Modern". In the following brief historical ages, characterized by a particular Bürgergeist, the family formed the nucleus of society, along with a product and a status of the system and its integrity, as well as an homologating pattern for education. The next epochal transitions began in the second half of the twentieth century, and raised the issue of new paradigms of couple and family, thus requiring a renewed aid as essential to the Pedagogy as a social science and a profession.
Beyond the nuclear family
BLEZZA, FRANCO
2010-01-01
Abstract
The family properly defined "nuclear" is a cultural construction resulting in the Enlightenment, the bourgeois revolutions at the end of '700 and in the end of the Age historiographically called "Modern". In the following brief historical ages, characterized by a particular Bürgergeist, the family formed the nucleus of society, along with a product and a status of the system and its integrity, as well as an homologating pattern for education. The next epochal transitions began in the second half of the twentieth century, and raised the issue of new paradigms of couple and family, thus requiring a renewed aid as essential to the Pedagogy as a social science and a profession.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.