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Oikos – Domus – Household

The Many Lives of a Common Word

by David K. O'Rourke (Author)
©2013 Monographs XXVIII, 174 Pages

Summary

Oikos – Domus – Household: The Many Lives of a Common Word describes historic episodes in the lives of these words, from the Greek oikos and Roman domus to our current family and home. The episodes highlight their function as controlling metaphors used very differently from culture to culture, but often as ways to control basic issues, like the context in which women become pregnant and the control of land and its transmission to heirs. This book also describes how these words and their current equivalents, home and family, are used as metaphors to illustrate how people who count are supposed to live and also to justify disinterest in people who do not count.
One of the most important functions of the household is providing a dependable context in which pregnancy can be controlled. It describes how another key interest, continuing the male line, is embodied. Currently family is a politically useful, normative fiction. Family and home have little concrete meaning other than as metaphors for how people are supposed to live. There is no consistent meaning for these words from one era and one culture to another.
Each episode is described on its own trying to avoid «history by hindsight.» There are no attempts to trace causes from one time or event to another, but rather an attempt, to the limited extent possible, to describe episodes seen within their own contexts and mindsets. However, the fact that women can now have control over their own pregnancy is seen as a radical change in the role and definition of family and household.

Details

Pages
XXVIII, 174
Publication Year
2013
ISBN (PDF)
9781453910719
ISBN (Hardcover)
9781433115776
DOI
10.3726/978-1-4539-1071-9
Language
English
Publication date
2013 (September)
Keywords
home family culture pregnancy
Published
New York, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, Oxford, Wien, 2013. 174 pp.

Biographical notes

David K. O'Rourke (Author)

David K. O’Rourke writes extensively in the area of cultural history with an emphasis on the destructive power of social idealisms. Most recently he co-wrote and produced the documentary film <Red Terror on the Amber Coast, describing the Soviet’s fifty-year occupation of the Baltic Republics after the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact. He is the author of Demons by Definition: Social Idealism, Religious Nationalism, and the Demonizing of Dissent (Lang, 1998) and How America’s First Settlers Invented Chattel Slavery: Dehumanizing Native Americans and Africans with Language, Laws, Guns and Religion (Lang, 2005, 2009). He also writes on current issues in re-establishing the intellectual life in post-Soviet Eastern Europe.

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