Civilization is not inherited. It is raised.What if the story of civilization has been hiding in plain sight - in the children each generation raises?History is often told through kings, wars, inventions, empires, and revolutions. But beneath every civilization lies a quieter force: the way societies bring children into the world, protect them, discipline them, educate them, idealize them, depend on them, and prepare them for the future.In KIN: Childhood, Parenting, and the Making of Civilization, Nam Nguyen explores childhood as one of the hidden forces of human history. From prehistoric families and ancient empires to schools, factories, nations, screens, climate anxiety, and artificial intelligence, KIN traces the changing place of children in society - and reveals how deeply the future is shaped by the way each generation raises the next.Blending history, psychology, anthropology, parenting, education, and cultural analysis, KIN offers a sweeping new lens on the human story. It is not a parenting manual, but a serious and accessible work of big-idea nonfiction about how childhood reflects the values, fears, ambitions, and contradictions of every age.To understand a civilization, look at what it asks of its children.For readers interested in history, culture, parenting, childhood development, psychology, education, anthropology, society, and the future of civilization, KIN is an ambitious reflection on how families and institutions shape not only children, but the world they will inherit.
AmazonPagina's: 358, Paperback, Octomind Publishing
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