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Colonial life was harsh,making it difficultforthefirstgenerationsofEuropean immigrants to sustain stable families. Because of th ...
Chapter 2 (Garrett,1990).Thegoalof parentingwas tousherchildrenoutof infancyasquickly as possible and to develop their independe ...
The Changing Face of theAmerican Family: Early History work,discipline,andself-denial—all embracedbyreligiousbeliefs—were positi ...
Chapter 2 for marriage in the 1600s.Instead,when children were old enough to marry, property,religion,and family interests were ...
The Changing Face of theAmerican Family: Early History Puritancolonies,whichledtoadecreasein themortalityrateandanincreaseinthe ...
less preoccupied with human sinfulness and child depravity. Rather than break the child’s will or annihilate a child’s sense of ...
Religioncontinuedtobeahallmarkof theNewWorldduringthe1700s.Between 1700and1740,itisestimated75to80%of theColonialpopulationatten ...
Cultural Assimilation.Assimilationwas virtually impossible for earlyAfrican- Americans.The firstAfrican-Americans to arrive in t ...
Fictive Kin.American slaves were considered property and could not legally marry.Therefore,having a permanent family was not a g ...
of genuine affection between a black woman and her white master (Redefining Family,2005). The establishment of stable,nurturing ...
most fundamental effects of the war on Native-American women was the disruption of home, family, and agricultural life (Berkin, ...
Chapter 2 homes for substantial periods of time for work.Having“things”became more important than relationships for these commod ...
The Changing Face of theAmerican Family: Early History of the CivilWar,industrialization,and a huge immigrant influx of Irish,an ...
Chapter 2 reassemblingtoreadtheBibleor other literatureout loud.On theSabbath,the entirefamily attendedchurch together.By mid-ce ...
The Changing Face of theAmerican Family: Early History demonstratetheirreadinessforadulthood. Thisresultedinaseparationbetween c ...
Chapter 2 children began to move farther from their parents’homes. Ironically,because of the nation’s rapid material and geograp ...
The Changing Face of theAmerican Family: Early History unskilled laborer earned only $1.00 per week.Blacksmiths and machinists w ...
Chapter 2 During the CivilWar and immediately after,little was heard of the movement. However,in 1890,the NationalAmerican Woman ...
The Changing Face of theAmerican Family: Early History Go West, Go Forth!With the downturn in the economy came Horace Greeley’s ...
Chapter 2 and much more (West,1994).Women, more than men,were responsible for maintaining a good Christian home and upholding th ...
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