Abstract

This article utilises the south Wales coalfield in the interwar period as a case study to illustrate the applicability of two sociological theories – family systems theory and the social ecology of the family – to impairment in the past. It demonstrates that a theoretically-informed approach can help to situate impairment in its particular contexts, most especially the family and the community, and give a better sense of the lived experience of disability. It also demonstrates the complexity of the experience of disability as the family and economic circumstances of each impaired individual varied and led to different forms of care-giving or the utilisation of different sources of support. The article also sheds further light on the ubiquity of disability as many families included a number of individuals with different impairments and this too had consequences for experiences and coping strategies.

Highlights

  • General rights Copyright and moral rights for the publications made accessible in the Aberystwyth Research Portal are retained by the authors and/or other copyright owners and it is a condition of accessing publications that users recognise and abide by the legal requirements associated with these rights

  • We discuss two overlapping theories which have their origins in sociological analysis and are utilised in contemporary social work – namely, family systems theory and the social ecology of the family – and consider the ways in which these can be applied to a particular historical context

  • While therapists who utilise family systems theory in their work take account of change within any family they treat, broader social and cultural changes over longer periods of time, many of which change the very character and definition of the family, are not accounted for in ways that historians would value within these theories

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Summary

Aberystwyth University

Disability and the Family in South Wales Coalfield Society, c.1920–1939.

Document License CC BY
By Ben Curtis and Steven Thompson
Conclusion
Findings
Biographical Notes
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