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Family reunions --- Grandmothers --- Older women --- Mississippi
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Family reunions --- Fiction --- Providence (R.I.) --- Fiction.
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Family reunions --- United States --- Social life and customs.
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Urban youth --- Family reunions --- Reunions, Family --- Parties --- City dwellers --- Youth --- City children
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Brothers --- Family reunions --- Frères --- Réunions familiales --- Fiction --- Fiction --- Romans --- Romans, nouvelles, etc.
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African American families --- African Americans --- African Americans --- Family reunions --- Slavery --- Genealogy --- History --- History --- Redford, Dorothy Spruill. --- North Carolina --- Somerset Place (N.C.) --- Genealogy. --- History.
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Comment définir la famille en Grèce ancienne ? Qui invite- t-on chez soi ? Suivant quelles modalités ? Pourquoi ? Longtemps, les historiens ont exclu la famille du champ d'étude de la sociabilité, considérant qu'elle relevait de la sphère privée. L'analyse de célébrations ritualisées et normées, le plus souvent festives (mariage, naissance, décès ; sacrifices, banquets, processions, danses, chants), entre parents, amis et voisins, autrement dit entre familiers (oikeioi), ainsi que des discours qui y font référence (tragédies, comédies, plaidoyers civils, discours philosophiques, lois...), conduit cependant à éclairer des formes de sociabilité plus ou moins formelle propres à appréhender la composition de la famille grecque dans l'Antiquité, son ouverture, ses limites et à définir ses normes, sa cohésion et son identité par des comportements spécifiques et les liens créés. Elle permet également de situer les individus dans l'oikos en fonction de leur statut, de leur âge et de leur sexe. Les célébrations sont organisées et transformées en spectacle, les relations forgées sont théâtralisées. La famille est ainsi comprise comme un nœud de solidarités organiques et imbriquées, un espace de visibilité sociale aux frontières perméables et floues, plutôt que comme une structure juridique figée et un lieu d'expression du privé à l'intérieur de la cité grecque. Le livre met en lumière les liens qui se nouent et perdurent à l'intérieur de la famille et la manière dont ces relations tissées dans un cadre domestique façonnent des interactions plus larges de la famille à la cité, principalement aux époques archaïque et classique, dans le monde grec. Il pose en définitive la difficile question de la nature de la cité.
Family reunions --- Interpersonal relations --- Families --- Réunions familiales --- Relations humaines --- Familles --- History --- Histoire --- Greece --- Grèce --- Social life and customs. --- Moeurs et coutumes --- Famille --- --Réseaux sociaux --- --Grèce ancienne --- --famille --- famille --- célébration --- société (milieu humain) --- fête --- sociabilité --- Festivals --- Social networks --- History. --- Social life and customs --- --Families --- Réunions familiales --- Grèce --- Réseaux sociaux --- Grèce ancienne --- Classics --- Antiquité --- réseaux sociaux --- mœurs --- coutume
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Fugitive slaves --- Women slaves --- African American women --- Family reunions --- Reunions, Family --- Parties --- Afro-American women --- Women, African American --- Women, Negro --- Women --- Slave women --- Slaves --- Runaway slaves --- Slavery --- History --- Walker, Mary, --- Family. --- Cambridge (Mass.) --- Orange County (N.C.) --- Orange Co., N.C. --- Johnston County (N.C.) --- Bladen County (N.C.) --- Granville County (N.C.) --- Durham County (N.C.) --- Women, Enslaved --- Enslaved persons --- Enslaved women
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This book focuses on one of the most visible and important consequences of total defeat in postwar Germany: the return to East and West Germany of the two million German soldiers and POWs who spent an extended period in Soviet captivity. These former prisoners made up a unique segment of German society. They were both soldiers in the war of racial annihilation on the Eastern front and then suffered extensive hardship and deprivation themselves as prisoners of war. The book examines the lingering consequences of the soldiers' return and explores returnees' own responses to a radically changed and divided homeland. Historian Frank Biess traces the origins of the postwar period to the last years of the war, when ordinary Germans began to face the prospect of impending defeat. He then demonstrates parallel East and West German efforts to overcome the German loss by transforming returning POWs into ideal post-totalitarian or antifascist citizens. By exploring returnees' troubled adjustment to the more private spheres of the workplace and the family, the book stresses the limitations of these East and West German attempts to move beyond the war. Based on a wide array of primary and secondary sources, Homecomings combines the political history of reconstruction with the social history of returnees and the cultural history of war memories and gender identities. It unearths important structural and functional similarities between German postwar societies, which remained infused with the aftereffects of unprecedented violence, loss, and mass death long after the war was over.
Germany --- History --- American Psychiatric Association. --- Americanization. --- Baumkötter, Heinz. --- Bautzen internment camp. --- Beria, Lavrenty Pavlovich. --- Buchenwald. --- Caritas Kriegsgefangenhilfe. --- Christian churches. --- Cold War. --- Dachau. --- Fischer, August. --- Fischerhof clinic. --- Free German Youth (FDJ). --- Fühmann, Franz. --- German Communist Party (KPD). --- Goebbels, Joseph. --- Grüber, Propst. --- Heimkehrer conferences. --- Heuss, Theodor. --- Holocaust survivors. --- Kienlesberg transition camp. --- Korean War. --- Königswinter. --- Lewke, Karl. --- Merridale, Catherine. --- Moeller, Robert. --- Nazi Party membership. --- Nazi regime. --- Operation Barbarossa. --- POWs, Jewish. --- Panzinger, Friedrich. --- antifascist conversion. --- bourgeois reconstruction. --- captivity narratives. --- citizenship. --- collective innocence. --- commemorative culture. --- denazification. --- divorce rates. --- dystrophy. --- employment issues of returnees. --- eugenics. --- euthanasia program, Nazi. --- expellee organizations. --- family reunions. --- gender relations. --- malnutrition. --- memory studies. --- pension neurosis. --- politics of memory. --- psychic trauma.
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