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Hunt, Gather, Parent
What Ancient Cultures Can Teach Us about the Lost Art of Raising

Inglese · Tascabile

Spedizione di solito entro 1 a 3 giorni lavorativi

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NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLERMORE THAN 1 MILLION COPIES SOLD

The oldest cultures in the world have mastered the art of raising happy, well-adjusted children. What can we learn from them?

Hunt, Gather, Parent is full of smart ideas that I immediately wanted to force on my own kids.” —Pamela Druckerman, The New York Times Book Review

“Ms. Doucleff might be the biggest parenting expert you’ve never heard about. Hunt, Gather, Parent, published in 2021, has been translated into thirty-one languages. It has sold more than one million copies worldwide and has spent eleven weeks on the New York Times bestseller list….Most great-grandparents would consider Hunt, Gather, Parent mere common sense. But to me, a clueless millennial, the advice was revolutionary: Be together, encourage autonomy, and don’t interfere.” —Emi Nietfeld, The New York Times

When Dr. Michaeleen Doucleff becomes a mother, she examines the studies behind modern parenting guidance and finds the evidence frustratingly limited and often ineffective. Curious to learn about more effective parenting approaches, she visits a Maya village in the Yucatán Peninsula. There she encounters moms and dads who parent in a totally different way than we do—and raise extraordinarily kind, generous, and helpful children without yelling, nagging, or issuing timeouts. What else, Doucleff wonders, are Western parents missing out on?

In Hunt, Gather, Parent, Doucleff sets out with her three-year-old daughter in tow to learn and practice parenting strategies from families in three of the world’s most venerable communities: Maya families in Mexico, Inuit families above the Arctic Circle, and Hadzabe families in Tanzania. She sees that these cultures don’t have the same problems with children that Western parents do. Most strikingly, parents build a relationship with young children that is vastly different from the one many Western parents develop—it’s built on cooperation instead of control, trust instead of fear, and personalized needs instead of standardized development milestones.

Maya parents are masters at raising cooperative children. Without resorting to bribes, threats, or chore charts, Maya parents rear loyal helpers by including kids in household tasks from the time they can walk. Inuit parents have developed a remarkably effective approach for teaching children emotional intelligence. When kids cry, hit, or act out, Inuit parents respond with a calm, gentle demeanor that teaches children how to settle themselves down and think before acting. Hadzabe parents are experts on raising confident, self-driven kids with a simple tool that protects children from stress and anxiety, so common now among American kids.

Not only does Doucleff live with families and observe their methods firsthand, she also applies them with her own daughter, with striking results. She learns to discipline without yelling. She talks to psychologists, neuroscientists, anthropologists, and sociologists and explains how these strategies can impact children’s mental health and development. Filled with practical takeaways that parents can implement immediately, Hunt, Gather, Parent helps us rethink the ways we relate to our children, and reveals a universal parenting paradigm adapted for American families.


Info autore










Michaeleen Doucleff, PhD, has reported on children’s health for NPR’s science desk for more than a decade. In 2015, she was part of the team that earned a George Foster Peabody Award for its coverage of the Ebola outbreak in West Africa. She has a doctorate in chemistry from the University of California, Berkeley, and a bachelor of science from the California Institute of Technology. Before joining NPR, Doucleff completed a postdoctoral fellowship at the National Institutes of Health. She lives with her husband and daughter in Alpine, Texas, and is the author of the New York Times bestseller Hunt, Gather, Parent and Dopamine Kids.


Dettagli sul prodotto

Autori Michaeleen Doucleff, Michaeleen Doucleff
Editore Simon & Schuster USA
 
Contenuto Libro
Forma del prodotto Tascabile
Data pubblicazione 31.03.2022
Categoria Guide e manuali > Libri sul benessere, vita quotidiana > Famiglia
 
EAN 9781982149680
ISBN 978-1-982149-68-0
Dimensioni (della confezione) 14 x 21.3 x 2 cm
 
Categorie Radio, Maya, Paleo, Inuit, Podcast, Sociology, Toddlers, Cultural Anthropology, Social Science, Pamela Druckerman, Amy Chua, Children, Anthropology, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Children's Studies, FAMILY & RELATIONSHIPS / Parenting / General, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural & Social, parenting, Social & cultural anthropology, ethnography, Behavioral science, Advice on parenting, Social and cultural anthropology, families, Age groups: children, Child development, Child psychology, Parenting: advice and issues, Self-sufficiency, Screen Time, Child care, behavior problems, NPR, Child rearing, chores, child communication, hunter gatherer, parent child relationship, Anxious generation, All Things Considered, national public radio, Morning Edition, child behavior, parenting advice, child autonomy, child discipline, How to Raise an Adult, bringing up bebe, common sense parenting, Smartest Kids in the World, Behavior Issues, Amanda Ripley, Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother, child raising, how to talk so little kids will listen, free range parenting, children’s studies, darby saxbe, Julie King, mindful underparenting, smart ideas for parenting, Joanna Faber, Julie Lythcott-Haim
 

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