A fresh collection of original essays by leading scholars that focuses on how families operate in everyday what they are, how they work, and why they matter. Families as They Really Are goes to the heart of the family values debate by reframing the question about families from “Are they breaking down?” to “Where are they going, how, and why?”
Essays in the book are not reprints; you won’t find them anywhere else. Each article is a new contribution to the research and theory about families, drawn from an interdisciplinary community of experts.
The four parts of Families as They Really Are focus on how we got to where we are today, what’s happening in relationships, youth in the 21st century, and the state of the gender revolution.
It’s a good compilation with short chapters on the realities of 21st century families in America. Easily accessible for the curious general public, but also rigorous enough for classroom use. My only complaint is that the “voice” of many of the authors is lost in the editing to short summary chapters. Many of the authors write in a much more engaging fashion in their original books or articles.
I read this for a sociology class and really enjoyed the short essays that informed the readers about families and sex in the 21st century. It is a textbook I plan on saving because it had so much information.
This textbook was composed of short essays on various topics regarding families. I enjoyed this format and the depth and scope of information presented much more than traditional textbooks.
Great overview of family studies and issues of family and inequality in the U.S. I'm using it in my 2000-level course right now. The best part of this text is that the chapters are so short and digestible. I think the editor had something to do with that. There's an incredible amount of (extremely accessible) information here. It's great for course adoption, but also for someone outside of sociology who wants to get a better idea how to interpret data on the family.