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Thursday, February 18, 2016

'No Place For Discontent': A History Of The Family Dinner In America

In homes across the United States, families sit down around their dining tables to share a meal together known as the Family Dinner. This can be a joyous occasion or a contentious one. Whether you feel warm and fuzzy or grit your teeth at the thought, the family dinner is an opportunity for familial communication that didn't always exist. As dining as a family became an institution in American life, it evolved from being a time for restraint to being a time for expression — an evolution visible in art and film.

Before the late 18th century, it was difficult for American families to dine together regularly, in part because dining rooms and dining tables were not yet a thing. Rooms and tables had multiple uses, and families would eat in shifts, if necessary. If there weren't enough chairs for all members of the family, the men would sit and the women and children might stand, coming and going from the table. (Blame the patriarchy.)

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2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Leave it to Beaver! I'm that old...but, those were the days!

Two Things Could Be True said...

When life was much easier, freer and happier. Even with the Cold War, I'd take that over the insanity of NOW!