The evolution of childhood.
Barbarism and religion: late Roman and early medieval childhood.
Survivors and surrogates: children and parents from the ninth to the thirteenth centuries.
The middle-class child in urban Italy, fourteenth to early sixteenth century.
The child as beginning and end: fifteenth and sixteenth century English childhood.
Nature versus nature: patterns and trends in seventeenth-century French child-rearing.
Child-rearing in seventeenth-century England and America.
A period of ambivalence: eighteenth-century American childhood.
"That enemy is the baby": childhood in Imperial Russia.
Home as a nest: middle class childhood in nineteenth-century Europe.