
Prosperity and Parenthood
A Study of Family Planning among the Victorian Middle Classes
- 248 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
About this book
First Published in 1954, Prosperity and Parenthood is a study of Victorian middle-class ideas about the standard of living, marriage, and the responsibilities of family life. The book begins by tracing the fall in fertility in the 1870s to a change in the middle-class conception of parenthood and goes on to show that the standard of living considerably expanded during the period of great prosperity, roughly 1850 to 1870.
The author also gives a detailed study of what the middle classes considered appropriate for a civilized existence and ends by considering the "Great Depression" as a possible factor attacking the actual level of living and making it possible for the middle classes to maintain established standards only by cutting down the size of their families. This is an important historical reference work for students and scholars of sociology, sociology of family, British sociology, social history, and medical sociology.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Original Title Page
- Original Copyright Page
- Table of Contents
- Acknowledgements
- I. The Decline in Fertility
- II. The Population Controversy
- III. The ‘Proper’ Time to Marry
- IV. The Pattern of Expenditure
- V. Domestic Assistance
- VI. The Paraphernalia of Gentility
- VII. Incomes
- VIII. A Case Study—Anthony Trollope
- IX. The Eighteen Seventies and After
- X. Birth Control and the Size of the Family
- XI. The Cost of Children
- XII. The Standard of Living and the Fall in Fertility
- I. Domestic Economy
- II. A Middle-class Housewife of the Early Seventies
- III. Books on Marriage at the End of the Century
- Notes
- Subject Index
- Index of Persons, Organisations, Sources, etc.