- fama (Bambara chief)
Bambara: …that provides a chief, or fama. The fama has considerable powers but must defer to a council of elders.
- Fama Fraternitatis (document)
illuminati: Early illuminati: …the Rosicrucian order was the Fama Fraternitatis, first published in 1614 but probably circulated in manuscript form somewhat earlier than this. It recounts the journey of the reputed founder of the movement, Christian Rosenkreuz, to Damascus, Damcar (a legendary hidden city in Arabia), Egypt, and Fès, where he was well…
- Fama, Eugene F. (American economist)
Eugene F. Fama is an American economist who, with Lars P. Hansen and Robert J. Shiller, was awarded the 2013 Nobel Prize for Economics for his contributions to the development of the efficient-market hypothesis and the empirical analysis of asset prices. Fama showed that it is very difficult to
- Fama, Eugene Francis (American economist)
Eugene F. Fama is an American economist who, with Lars P. Hansen and Robert J. Shiller, was awarded the 2013 Nobel Prize for Economics for his contributions to the development of the efficient-market hypothesis and the empirical analysis of asset prices. Fama showed that it is very difficult to
- famadihana (Malagasy custom)
Madagascar: Daily life and social customs: …aside from burial, is the famadihana, in which the bones of the ancestors are removed from the family tomb, wrapped in new lamba especially woven for that purpose, and placed again in the tomb after the delivery of a kabary, a traditional “special occasion” speech. The kabary is also utilized…
- Famagusta (Cyprus)
Famagusta, major port in the Turkish Cypriot-administered portion of northern Cyprus. It lies on the island’s east coast in a bay between Capes Greco and Eloea and is about 37 miles (55 km) east of Nicosia. The port possesses the deepest harbor in Cyprus. Famagusta is a Frankish corruption of its
- Famagusta Bay (bay, Cyprus)
Cyprus: Relief: …Bay in the west to Famagusta Bay in the east. Roughly in the centre of the plain is Nicosia. The plain is the principal cereal-growing area in the island.
- Famatina, Sierra de (mountain, Argentina)
Argentina: The Northwest: …feet (6,250 metres) in the Sierra de Famatina in the west.
- Fame (film by Parker [1980])
Alan Parker: …varied films as the blockbuster Fame (1980), which centred on students studying at a high school for the performing arts in New York City; Pink Floyd: The Wall (1982), a musical inspired by the titular rock band’s album; and Mississippi Burning (1988), a drama about the killing of three civil…
- Fame & Folly (essays by Ozick)
Cynthia Ozick: … (1983), Metaphor & Memory (1989), Fame & Folly (1996), Quarrel & Quandary (2000), The Din in the Head (2006), and Critics, Monsters, Fanatics, and Other Literary Essays (2016).
- Fame and Obscurity (work by Talese)
New Journalism: From muckraking to Wolfe, Talese, and Capote: …Esquire pieces in the collection Fame and Obscurity (1970). Talese also used his skills as a literary journalist to write internationally best-selling books, including The Kingdom and the Power (1969), an inside look at The New York Times; Honor Thy Father (1971), about the rise and fall of the notorious…
- Fame Monster, The (album by Lady Gaga)
Lady Gaga: Success: The Fame and The Fame Monster: Her second album, The Fame Monster, was released in November 2009 and almost instantly produced another hit, “Bad Romance.” Other popular singles from the album followed, including “Alejandro” and “Telephone”. The latter song featured Beyoncé, as did a nine-minute video produced by Jonas Åkerlund starring the pair and…
- Fame Studios (recording facility, Florence, Alabama, United States)
Muscle Shoals Studios: “Land of 1000 Dances”: Fame Studios in Florence in 1961. He recruited his session musicians from a local group—Dan Penn and the Pallbearers—who played on the studio’s first hit, Arthur Alexander’s “You Better Move On.” Atlanta-based publisher Lowery Music provided regular work, and, after Jerry Wexler of Atlantic Records…
- Famenne depression (geographical region, Belgium)
Famennian Stage: …derived from the region of Famenne in southern Belgium, which has served historically as the type district.
- Famennian Stage (geology and stratigraphy)
Famennian Stage, uppermost of the two standard worldwide divisions of Late Devonian rocks and time. Famennian time spans the interval between 372.2 million and 358.9 million years ago. The name of the Famennian Stage is derived from the region of Famenne in southern Belgium, which has served
- Famicom (video game console)
Nintendo console, groundbreaking eight-bit video game console created by Japanese designer Uemura Masayuki. The Nintendo console, or Nintendo Entertainment System (NES), was released as the Famicom in Japan on July 15, 1983. The Famicom offered the ability to play popular arcade games such as
- famiglia Manzoni, La (work by Ginzburg)
Italian literature: Other writings: …biography (La famiglia Manzoni [1983; The Manzoni Family]). Giovanni Arpino excelled at personal sympathies that cross cultural boundaries (La suora giovane [1959; The Novice] and Il fratello italiano [1980; “The Italian Brother”]). Fulvio Tomizza also tackled this theme in L’amicizia (1980; “The Friendship”).
- famiglia Manzoni, La (work by Ginzburg)
Italian literature: Other writings: …Sayings]), handles fictional characters (Famiglia [1977; Family]), or ventures into historical biography (La famiglia Manzoni [1983; The Manzoni Family]). Giovanni Arpino excelled at personal sympathies that cross cultural boundaries (La suora giovane [1959; The Novice] and Il fratello italiano [1980; “The Italian Brother”]).
- Familia (Polish family)
Czartoryski family, the leading noble family of Poland in the 18th century, eclipsing the rival Potocki family in both power and prestige. Although the members of the Czartoryski family trace their lineage back to the 14th-century noble Gedymin (Gediminas) of Lithuania, they first achieved
- familia de Pascual Duarte, La (novel by Cela)
Camilo José Cela: …familia de Pascual Duarte (1942; The Family of Pascual Duarte) and is considered to have given new life to Spanish literature. His literary production—primarily novels, short narratives, and travel diaries—is characterized by experimentation and innovation in form and content. Cela is also credited by some critics with having established the…
- familial adenomatous polyposis (pathology)
colorectal cancer: Causes and symptoms: …colorectal cancer—specifically, forms such as familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP), Gardner syndrome, and hereditary nonpolyposis colon cancer (HNPCC)—can predispose an individual to developing colorectal cancer. Each of these conditions is caused in part by a known genetic mutation. In addition, Ashkenazi Jews have a slightly higher incidence of colorectal cancer due…
- familial adenomatous polyposis coli (pathology)
colorectal cancer: Causes and symptoms: …colorectal cancer—specifically, forms such as familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP), Gardner syndrome, and hereditary nonpolyposis colon cancer (HNPCC)—can predispose an individual to developing colorectal cancer. Each of these conditions is caused in part by a known genetic mutation. In addition, Ashkenazi Jews have a slightly higher incidence of colorectal cancer due…
- familial amyloid polyneuropathy (disease)
amyloidosis: …common forms is known as familial amyloid polyneuropathy (FAP), which is caused by mutations in a gene designated TTR (transthyretin). Transthyretin protein, produced by the TTR gene, normally circulates in the blood and plays an important role in the transport and tissue delivery of thyroid hormone and retinol. FAP primarily…
- familial benign hypercalcemia (medical disorder)
hyperparathyroidism: …result of a disorder called familial hypocalciuric hypercalcemia (familial benign hypercalcemia). This disorder is caused by a mutation in the calcium receptor gene that reduces the ability of calcium to inhibit parathormone secretion. In most patients with this disorder, serum calcium and parathormone concentrations are only minimally elevated.
- familial Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease
Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease: Types: …three major types of CJD: familial (fCJD), sporadic (sCJD), and acquired (aCJD). Both sCJD and aCJD may be further divided into subtypes. The most common sCJD subtype is sCJDMM1. Subtypes of aCJD include iatrogenic (iCJD) and variant (vCJD) forms of the disease (kuru is sometimes considered a third subtype of…
- familial disease (pathology)
human disease: Diseases of genetic origin: A familial disease is hereditary, passed on from one generation to the next. It resides in a genetic mutation that is transmitted by mother or father (or both) through the gametes to their offspring. Not all genetic disorders are familial, however, because the mutation may arise…
- familial disorder (pathology)
human disease: Diseases of genetic origin: A familial disease is hereditary, passed on from one generation to the next. It resides in a genetic mutation that is transmitted by mother or father (or both) through the gametes to their offspring. Not all genetic disorders are familial, however, because the mutation may arise…
- familial dysautonomia (pathology)
Riley-Day syndrome, an inherited disorder occurring almost exclusively in Ashkenazic Jews that is caused by abnormal functioning of the autonomic nervous system. Riley-Day syndrome is characterized by emotional instability, decreased tear production, low blood pressure upon standing up (postural
- familial dysbetalipoproteinemia (medical disorder)
metabolic disease: Lipoprotein disorders: Similar symptoms are present in familial dysbetalipoproteinemia (hyperlipoproteinemia type III), which may be inherited as an autosomal recessive or autosomal dominant condition (that is, if the trait has been inherited from both parents). In this disorder, which manifests in adulthood, increased blood cholesterol and triglycerides are present due to an…
- familial hypercholesterolemia (medical disorder)
familial hypercholesterolemia, an inherited metabolic disease that is caused by deficiency of the LDL (low-density lipoprotein) receptor on the surface of cells in the liver and other organs. As a result, LDL cholesterol is not moved into the cells and thus remains in the blood, eventually
- familial hypocalciuric hypercalcemia (medical disorder)
hyperparathyroidism: …result of a disorder called familial hypocalciuric hypercalcemia (familial benign hypercalcemia). This disorder is caused by a mutation in the calcium receptor gene that reduces the ability of calcium to inhibit parathormone secretion. In most patients with this disorder, serum calcium and parathormone concentrations are only minimally elevated.
- familial hypophosphatemia (pathology)
bone disease: Metabolic bone disease: …a hereditary disorder known as familial hypophosphatemia; the phosphate leak causes low concentration of blood phosphate and, in turn, deficient mineralization of bone tissue, rickets, and osteomalacia. Familial hypophosphatemia is the most common cause of rickets in Europe and the United States. The basic deficiency is treated with high oral…
- familial medullary thyroid carcinoma (pathology)
multiple endocrine neoplasia: MEN2: …75 percent of affected families), familial medullary thyroid carcinoma (FMTC-only; accounting for 5 to 20 percent of affected families), and MEN2B (accounting for less than 5 percent of affected families).
- familial osteochondritis dissecans (disease)
connective tissue disease: Hereditary disorders of connective tissue: Familial osteochondritis dissecans is an inherited disease in which cartilage and a piece of bone connected to it detach from the end of the bone in a joint. This occurs because a protein in cartilage that normally gives cartilage its gel-like qualities is mutated; the…
- familial pancreatic cancer (pathology)
pancreatic cancer: Symptoms and causes: …whereas others are associated with familial pancreatic cancer, which is generally defined as the occurrence of pancreatic cancer in at least one pair of first-degree relatives. Mutations in several different genes have been linked to familial pancreatic cancer, including mutations in BRCA1, BRCA2, CDKN2A, TP53, and PALLD; some of these…
- familial periodic paralysis (pathology)
muscle disease: The periodic paralyses: In hypokalemic periodic paralysis, the level of potassium in the blood falls during the attack, which also can be precipitated by anything that tends to lower the potassium level. Hyperkalemic periodic paralysis, on the other hand, is associated with an increase in the potassium level. An…
- familial polyposis (pathology)
digestive system disease: Polyps: …the rare disorder known as familial polyposis, in which the colon may be studded with hundreds or thousands of small polyps. Because a colon that produces so many polyps eventually produces cancers as well, the colon should be removed surgically as soon as the diagnosis is made. The rectum may…
- familial thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (medical disorder)
von Willebrand factor: …and have been associated with familial thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura, a rare disorder involving abnormal blood coagulation.
- familiar (demon)
familiar, in Western demonology, small animal or imp kept as a witch’s attendant, given to her by the devil or inherited from another witch. The familiar was a low-ranking demon that assumed any animal shape, such as a toad, dog, insect, or black cat. Sometimes the familiar was described as a
- Familiar Lectures on Botany (work by Phelps)
Almira Hart Lincoln Phelps: …1829 Lincoln published a textbook, Familiar Lectures on Botany, which enjoyed wide use and went through nine editions in 10 years. She married John Phelps in 1831. Over the next several years she published Lectures to Young Ladies (1833), Botany for Beginners (1833), Geology for Beginners (1834), Chemistry for Beginners…
- Familiar Letters on Important Occasions (work by Richardson)
Samuel Richardson: …that has become known as Familiar Letters on Important Occasions. Occasionally he hit upon continuing the same subject from one letter to another, and, after a letter from “a father to a daughter in service, on hearing of her master’s attempting her virtue,” he supplied the daughter’s answer. This was…
- Familiar Quotations (work by Bartlett)
Justin Kaplan: As general editor for Bartlett’s Familiar Quotations (1992), he preferred more-contemporary quotes, including ones by filmmaker Woody Allen (“It’s not that I’m afraid to die. I just don’t want to be there when it happens.”) and Kermit the Frog (“It’s not that easy bein’ green.”) as well as one attributed…
- Familie Darner, Die (novel by Lewald)
Fanny Lewald: Die Familie Darner, 3 vol. (1888; “The Darner Family”), and Von Geschlecht zu Geschlecht, 8 vol. (1863–65; “From Generation to Generation”), are realistic novels about the lives of family members over several generations. Diogena (1847) is a parody of Gräfin Faustine, a sentimental novel by…
- Familie Schroffenstein, Die (novel by Kleist)
Heinrich von Kleist: …his first work, the tragedy Die Familie Schroffenstein (1803; “The Schroffenstein Family”), which depicts pathological states with ruthless clarity. Underlying this drama of error is Kleist’s recurring theme, the fallibility of human perception and the inability of the human intellect by itself to apprehend truth. At this time he was…
- Familien paa Gilje (work by Lie)
Jonas Lie: …and Familien paa Gilje (1883; The Family at Gilje, 1920), a novel that deals with the position of women, the most popular question of his day. The latter is a classic of Norwegian literature.
- Familiens sorg (work by Vogt)
Nils Collett Vogt: …family, and his first novel, Familiens sorg (1889; “A Grief to His Family”), is about youth in rebellion against a social order dominated by old men. The second edition of this novel is notable because the author’s preface bears strong witness to the stifling conservatism of his milieu. He was…
- Families: Crisis and Caring (work by Brazelton)
T. Berry Brazelton: …Toddlers and Parents (1974), and Families: Crisis and Caring (1990), focused on the parent-child relationship and the nature of individual differences in the behaviour of infants and young children.
- Familist (religious sect)
Familist, religious sect of Dutch origin, followers of Hendrik Niclaes, a 16th-century Dutch merchant. Niclaes’ main activity was in Emden, East Friesland (1540–60). In his Evangelium regni, issued in England as A Joyfyl Message of the Kingdom, he invited all “lovers of truth, of what nation and
- Famille Cardinal, La (work by Halévy)
Ludovic Halévy: …best of his fiction includes La Famille Cardinal (1883), a study of lower-class Parisian life during the early years of the Third Republic, and the sentimental novel L’Abbé Constantin (1882), which was a huge success with the public. He was elected to the Académie Française in 1884.
- famille jaune (Chinese pottery)
famille verte: …uses a yellow ground is famille jaune; the palette that uses a rich greenish black ground is famille noire. Famille verte ware was made largely during the Kangxi period (1661–1722) of the Qing dynasty.
- famille noire (Chinese pottery)
famille verte: …rich greenish black ground is famille noire. Famille verte ware was made largely during the Kangxi period (1661–1722) of the Qing dynasty.
- famille rose (Chinese pottery)
famille rose, group of Chinese porcelain wares characterized by decoration painted in opaque overglaze rose colours, chiefly shades of pink and carmine. These colours were known to the Chinese as yangcai (“foreign colours”) because they were first introduced from Europe (about 1685). By the time of
- famille verte (pottery)
famille verte, group of Chinese porcelain wares characterized by decoration painted in a colour range that includes yellow, blue, red, purple, and green, the latter sometimes used for the ground. The verte palette that uses a yellow ground is famille jaune; the palette that uses a rich greenish
- Famille, Pacte de (European history)
Pacte de Famille, any of three defensive alliances (1733, 1743, and 1761) between France and Spain, so called because both nations were ruled by members of the Bourbon family. The Pactes de Famille generally had the effect of involving Spain in European and colonial wars on the side of the French
- Familles des plantes (work by Adanson)
Michel Adanson: Adanson’s Familles des plantes (1763) described his classification system for plants, which was much opposed by Carolus Linnaeus, the Swedish botanist who had proposed his own classification system based on the reproductive organs of plants. Adanson’s classification of mollusks, a group that he originally described, was…
- family (kinship)
family, a group of persons united by the ties of marriage, blood, or adoption, constituting a single household and interacting with each other in their respective social positions, usually those of spouses, parents, children, and siblings. The family group should be distinguished from a household,
- Family (novel by Ba Jin)
Ba Jin: …was the novel Jia (1933; Family). It was the first volume of the autobiographical trilogy Jiliu (“Torrent”), which was completed in 1940 with the publication of the second and third volumes, Chun (“Spring”) and Qiu (“Autumn”). In the 1940s his writing became more pessimistic and less radical, and there was…
- Family (British television miniseries)
Roddy Doyle: Other works: …Doyle wrote the BBC miniseries Family, which generated heated controversy throughout Ireland for its raw depiction of topics that were regarded as taboo. The program shed harsh light on a family’s struggle with domestic violence and alcoholism and offered a grim portrait of life in a housing estate, the same…
- Family (Polish family)
Czartoryski family, the leading noble family of Poland in the 18th century, eclipsing the rival Potocki family in both power and prestige. Although the members of the Czartoryski family trace their lineage back to the 14th-century noble Gedymin (Gediminas) of Lithuania, they first achieved
- Family Affair (song by Stone)
John Legend: …the Family Stone song “Family Affair” on the tribute album Different Strokes by Different Folks.
- Family Affair, A (film by LaGravenese [2024])
Zac Efron: The Iron Claw and other projects from the 2020s: …the comedies Ricky Stanicky and A Family Affair.
- Family Album (novel by Lively)
Penelope Lively: …of three generations of women; Family Album (2009); and How It All Began (2011). The Purple Swamp Hen, and Other Stories was published in 2016.
- Family Allowance Act (Canada [1945])
Canada: Health and welfare: The Family Allowance Act has been a unique feature of the Canadian social security system since its inception in 1945. The Canada Pension Plan provides retirement, disability, and survivors’ benefits. The Old Age Security Act provides a monthly pension to all persons at least 65 years…
- family allowance benefit (social welfare)
social welfare program: Family allowance benefits: These are benefits provided by governments to families with a specified minimum number of children. The benefits may be open to all families, in which case the program is a step in the direction of a guaranteed family income, or they may…
- Family Arsenal, The (novel by Theroux)
Paul Theroux: The Great Railway Bazaar and The Mosquito Coast: The Family Arsenal (1976) centers on a group of terrorists in London. The Mosquito Coast, one of his best-known novels, is about an American inventor who attempts to create an ideal community in the Honduran jungle. In 1986 it was adapted into a film directed…
- Family Assistance Program (proposed United States legislation)
Richard Nixon: Domestic policies: Nixon’s proposed Family Assistance Program (FAP), intended to replace the service-oriented Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC), would have provided working and nonworking poor families with a guaranteed annual income—though Nixon preferred to call it a “negative income tax.” Although the measure was defeated in the…
- Family at Gilje, The (work by Lie)
Jonas Lie: …and Familien paa Gilje (1883; The Family at Gilje, 1920), a novel that deals with the position of women, the most popular question of his day. The latter is a classic of Norwegian literature.
- Family Carnovsky, The (novel by Singer)
I.J. Singer: …by Di mishpoḥe Ḳarnovsḳi (The Family Carnovsky).
- Family Chronicle, The (work by Aksakov)
Sergey Timofeyevich Aksakov: …become classics: Semeynaya khronika (1856; The Family Chronicle), Vospominaniya (1856; “Reminiscences”; Eng. trans. A Russian Schoolboy), and Detskie gody Bagrova-vnuka (1858; Childhood Years of Grandson Bagrov). Aksakov unfolds his chronicles objectively in an unaffected style with simple language. Their interest lies in the illusion of reality and intimacy created by…
- Family Circle (American magazine)
history of publishing: Women’s magazines in the United States: …first and most successful was Family Circle (founded 1932), given away in Piggly Wiggly supermarkets until 1946, when it was sold as a family monthly. Equally successful were Woman’s Day (founded 1937), published by a subsidiary of the Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company, and Better Living (founded 1951), sponsored…
- Family Compact (European history)
Pacte de Famille, any of three defensive alliances (1733, 1743, and 1761) between France and Spain, so called because both nations were ruled by members of the Bourbon family. The Pactes de Famille generally had the effect of involving Spain in European and colonial wars on the side of the French
- Family Compact (Canadian political group)
Canada: The rebellions of 1837–38: …elite was known as the Family Compact; in Lower Canada it was called the Château Clique. A similarly tightly knit group also dominated Nova Scotia politics. Forming the inner circle of the governor’s advisers, these cliques usually included all the important wealthy men of the colony. In Upper Canada the…
- family court (law)
family court, special court designed to deal with legal problems arising out of family relations. The family court is usually a consolidation of several types of courts dealing with narrower family problems, such as children’s courts and orphans’ courts. The family court operates according to
- Family Dog (American company)
San Francisco ballrooms: …incorporated their commune as the Family Dog shortly thereafter. Later that year a pair of rock concert benefit shows for the radical San Francisco Mime Troupe were organized by the troupe’s manager, Bill Graham. The first was held at the Calliope Ballroom on Howard Street and the second at the…
- Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (United States [1974])
Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA), U.S. legislation (1974) that governs the content of and access to student records in higher education. Also known as the Buckley Amendment after its primary sponsor, New York state senator James Buckley, the Family Educational Rights and Privacy
- Family Encounters the Depression, The (work by Angell)
Robert Cooley Angell: …Study of Undergraduate Adjustment (1930); The Family Encounters the Depression (1936); The Integration of American Society (1941); The Moral Integration of American Cities (1951); Free Society and Moral Crisis (1958); A Study of Values of Soviet and of American Elites (1963); Peace on the March (1969); and
- Family Feud (American television game show)
quiz: A history of quizzing: ’s Family Feud of the 1970s and ’80s, had contestants (members of two families) guess what answers had been given by most respondents in a survey. Jeopardy! flipped the quiz model around by having contestants guess the right questions for the answers provided to them. Who…
- Family from One End Street, The (work by Garnett)
children’s literature: Coming of age (1865–1945): …late 1930s, with Eve Garnett’s The Family from One End Street, of stories showing a sympathetic concern with the lives of slum children; the reflection, also in the 30s, of a serious interest, influenced by modern psychology, in the structure of the child’s vision of the world; the rise, efflorescence,…
- Family Guy (American animated television series)
Family Guy, American animated situation comedy created by Seth MacFarlane for the Fox Broadcasting Company. Premiering on January 31, 1999, it rapidly gained a reputation for its provocative humor and irreverent treatment of American culture and family life. Alongside The Simpsons and South Park,
- Family History of David (biblical literature)
biblical literature: The expansion of the Davidic Empire: …1 and 2, the so-called Succession History, or the Family History of David, which, according to many scholars, forms the oldest section of historiography in Scripture—contains accounts of the domestic problems of David’s reign. Though he showed generosity to Mephibosheth, the sole surviving son of the house of Saul, he…
- family income policy
insurance: Types of contracts: …such “package” contracts are the family income policy and the mortgage protection policy. In each of these, a base policy, usually whole life insurance, is combined with term insurance calculated so that the amount of protection declines as the policy runs its course. In the case of the mortgage protection…
- Family International, The (Christian communal group)
The Family International, millenarian Christian communal group that grew out of the ministry of David Berg (1919–94) to the hippies who had gathered in Huntington Beach, California, in the late 1960s. It teaches a message of Christian love based on scripture and Berg’s prophecies. The focus of the
- Family Islands (islands, The Bahamas)
Out Islands, the islands of The Bahamas apart from New Providence Island. Extending eastward off the Florida coast to just north of Hispaniola, the group encompasses some 3,000 islands and rocks with a combined area of about 5,000 square miles (13,000 square km). About 20 of the islands are
- Family Jewels, The (film by Lewis [1965])
Jerry Lewis: …recently deceased star, and in The Family Jewels (1965), Lewis essayed seven roles. After the box-office failures of The Family Jewels and Boeing, Boeing (1965), Lewis left Paramount for Columbia. However, audiences grew disenchanted with his films. Three on a Couch (1966) cast him as an artist trying to woo…
- family law
family law, body of law regulating family relationships, including marriage and divorce, the treatment of children, and related economic matters. In the past, family law was closely connected with the law of property and succession (see property law), and, judging from the records available, it
- Family Madness, A (novel by Keneally)
Thomas Keneally: His later novels included A Family Madness (1985), To Asmara (1989), Flying Hero Class (1991), Woman of the Inner Sea (1992), Jacko (1993), Homebush Boy (1995), Bettany’s Book (2000), The Tyrant’s Novel (2003),
- Family Matters (novel by Mistry)
Rohinton Mistry: Mistry’s third novel, Family Matters (2002), was set in a tiny two-room flat in modern-day Mumbai and presented a compelling portrayal of a family of Parsis living in exigent circumstances. His novella The Scream (2008) is narrated by an aging, isolated resident of a Mumbai apartment building. In…
- Family Matters (American television series)
geek: Geek culture: (1984), Pee-Wee’s Big Adventure (1985), Family Matters (1989–98), The IT Crowd (2006–13) and The Big Bang Theory (2007–19). Some experts have even argued that “geek culture,” formerly defined as outside conventional trends, has become the mainstream. Formerly geeky interests such as comic books, science fiction, and fantasy have been turned
- family medicine (medicine)
family practice, field of medicine that stresses comprehensive primary health care, regardless of the age or sex of the patient, with special emphasis on the family unit. Family practice as it is presently defined has only been officially recognized since 1969, but it developed from older models of
- Family Moskat, The (novel by Singer)
The Family Moskat, novel by Isaac Bashevis Singer, first published in installments from 1945 to 1948 in the Yiddish-language daily newspaper Forverts and in book form (two volumes) as Di familye Mushkat in 1950. A one-volume English translation also was published in 1950. Panoramic in sweep, the
- family name
surname, name added to a “given name” (also called the "first name"). In many cases the surname is inherited and held in common by members of a family. Originally, many surnames identified a person by his connection with another person, usually his father (Johnson, MacDonald); others gave his
- Family of Carlos IV, The (painting by Francisco Goya)
The Family of Carlos IV, oil painting by Francisco Goya in 1800 depicting the royal family of Spain. It has often been described as Goya’s greatest portrait. In 1799 Goya was made first court painter to Carlos (Charles) IV of Spain. The king requested a family portrait, and in the summer of 1800
- Family of Darius Before Alexander, The (painting by Veronese)
Paolo Veronese: The later years: In their solemn monumentality, The Family of Darius Before Alexander and the canvases executed for the Cuccina family (c. 1572), which contain splendid portraits, are more organic in structure.
- Family of Love (religious sect)
Familist, religious sect of Dutch origin, followers of Hendrik Niclaes, a 16th-century Dutch merchant. Niclaes’ main activity was in Emden, East Friesland (1540–60). In his Evangelium regni, issued in England as A Joyfyl Message of the Kingdom, he invited all “lovers of truth, of what nation and
- Family of Love, The (Christian communal group)
The Family International, millenarian Christian communal group that grew out of the ministry of David Berg (1919–94) to the hippies who had gathered in Huntington Beach, California, in the late 1960s. It teaches a message of Christian love based on scripture and Berg’s prophecies. The focus of the
- Family of Man, The (photography exhibit)
Edward Steichen: Curatorial work: “The Family of Man,” an exhibition he curated in 1955, was arguably the most important work of art in his long career. The exhibition was based on the concept of human solidarity, and Steichen selected 503 images from countless prints submitted from all over the world.…
- Family of Nan, 1990–92, The (photographic exhibition by Goldin)
Nan Goldin: …of Man” exhibition of 1955—The Family of Nan, 1990–92, in which she documented her friends’ AIDS-related deaths. She photographed Japanese youths while traveling in Asia, and in 1995 she published those images in the book Tokyo Love: Spring Fever 1994. In 1995 she also made a biographical film for…
- Family of Pascual Duarte, The (novel by Cela)
Camilo José Cela: …familia de Pascual Duarte (1942; The Family of Pascual Duarte) and is considered to have given new life to Spanish literature. His literary production—primarily novels, short narratives, and travel diaries—is characterized by experimentation and innovation in form and content. Cela is also credited by some critics with having established the…
- Family of Saltimbanques (work by Picasso)
Pablo Picasso: The move to Paris and the Rose Period: …specifically made that identification in Family of Saltimbanques (1905), where he assumes the role of Harlequin and Apollinaire is the strongman (according to their mutual friend, the writer André Salmon).
- family planning
planned parenthood, practice of measures designed to regulate the number and spacing of children within a family. The history of concern over the uncontrolled growth of populations is as old as recorded history, but it was not until about the 1950s that fears over a rapidly expanding world