Reviews

The Invention of Childhood by Hugh Cunningham

batbones's review against another edition

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4.0

Fascinating and well-researched. I especially liked how it made room for childhoods of various classes, not only dwelling on the very rich, or the very poor.

meghanparr's review against another edition

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informative reflective slow-paced

3.0

minib's review against another edition

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informative

3.25

give_me_my_tea's review against another edition

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informative reflective slow-paced

3.5

leslie_ann_thornton's review against another edition

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informative medium-paced

3.0

nwhyte's review against another edition

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3.0

http://nwhyte.livejournal.com/2023818.html[return][return]An attempt to chart society's attitudes to children in Britain from the earliest times to the present day, using literature. archaeology, historical records and of course social policy research for the most recent period. I had a couple of minor frustrations with the framing of Cunningham's analysis - the narrow geographical focus meant that he is comparing British children of a particular historical period largely with British children of other historical periods, and I think it might have been possible to learn from comparison with other countries (the Commonwealth gets a small look-in, but the rest of Europe, including Ireland, does not). And I actually felt he pulled his punches on one of his key arguments, that children should actually be listened to - though this emerges as an important theme of the book, the reasons why children are often not listened to, and why this might be a Bad Thing, are not really explored. [return][return]I found myself sympathetic to, but not certain about, Cunningham's conclusions: that childhood itself is becoming eroded as a concept in today's Britain, where overstretched parents do not have the social resources available to them that previous generations had, and young people often stay living with their parents much later than used to be the case; and that the media coverage of the most egregious criminal cases tends to project the role of impotent victim onto children, rather than actually listening to them, and perhaps this is driven by the wider uncertainty about childhood and parenthood that Cunningham identifies. But I'd have liked some harder facts as well.

amberinbookland's review against another edition

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slow-paced

2.25

eralon's review

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3.0

This is specifically a history of childhood in Great Britain. It's interesting but not as interesting as a larger examination of childhood throughout the world and throughout history. You can't draw any specific or scientific conclusions from the book. It serves more as entertainment than a book to clarify your thinking on the topic of childhood. I also thought the writer was a little overly-casual about the instances of child sexual abuse he covered.
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