ABSTRACT

This book is a vital new resource in the sociological study of family life in the 21st century. The chapters in this volume explore a diverse range of family and intimate life experiences, such as personal choices about reproduction and how life choices and family forms are mediated by factors including geographical location, race, ethnicity, sexuality, gender, income and government policy.

Through a series of evidence-based chapters, leading sociologists explore a diverse range of family and intimate life experiences and the contexts within which they are lived and experienced. Each chapter delves into the lives and experiences of people whose choices in some way seem to disrupt normative and traditional ideas of family, parenting and childhood. Family patterns and experiences of living apart together, troubled families, children in care, culture, coupledom, same-sex families and digital technology are covered and examined innovatively through theoretical engagement.

Chapters also incorporate innovative technologies and their use within family spaces that shape the nature of human relationships and interactions. These negotiations within the family are globally contextualised within the political and ideological frameworks of societies at any given moment in time. The work recognises the sensitivity of family and personal lives and incorporates the increasing need of the impact of emotionality that forms part of knowledge production. Additionally, innovative methods are showcased in chapters on researching the family through socially just methods, researcher emotionality and visual data.

By bringing together thought-provoking research findings and innovative methodological and theoretical approaches, this collection of essays raises and articulates relevant, timely and future thinking for its readers. This book will therefore be indispensable for students and researchers as well as professionals and policymakers interested in understanding family life in the 21st century.

part |92 pages

Part I

chapter 1|12 pages

Introduction

Negotiating families and personal lives in the 21st century

chapter 3|16 pages

Misrecognising ‘complex' families

A social harm perspective

chapter 4|15 pages

Understanding personal lives

After individualisation

chapter 5|16 pages

Disrupting doxa about children in care

Research from England

chapter 6|16 pages

Negotiating intimacy and family at distance

Living apart together relationships in China

part |88 pages

Part 2

chapter 7|15 pages

Of salsa and singlemuslim.com

Ethnographic insights about identity shifts and changed self-concepts in middle-aged women's post-separation/divorce transitions

chapter 8|16 pages

Exploring understandings of domestic violence with women in Sunderland

Negotiating and positioning emotionality within sensitive research

chapter 9|14 pages

Displaying family in a digital age

How parents negotiate technology, visibility and privacy

chapter 10|16 pages

Situating visual stories using photo elicitation and biographical narrative methods

Visual representations of family life in South Africa

chapter 12|8 pages

Looking ahead

What does this mean for the sociology of families and personal lives in the future?