Imatge de l'autor
13+ obres 280 Membres 6 Ressenyes

Sobre l'autor

Paula S. Fass is the Margaret Byrne Professor of History Emerita at the University of California, Berkeley. The author of The Damned and the Beautiful: American Youth in the 1920s, Kidnapped: Child Abduction in America, and Children of a New World, she recently edited The Routledge History of mostra'n més Childhood in the Western World mostra'n menys

Inclou aquests noms: Paula Fass, P. S. Fass

Crèdit de la imatge: Credit: David Shankbone, 2006, New York City

Obres de Paula S. Fass

Obres associades

A Companion to American Immigration (2006) — Col·laborador — 14 exemplars
The Hofstadter aegis, a memorial (1974) — Col·laborador — 9 exemplars

Etiquetat

Coneixement comú

Membres

Ressenyes

I read this for research purposes. The book was far more academic in nature than I expected, and an especially slow read through the first half. I was hoping for a more general overview of American youth through this period with information about slang and culture, but the data cited throughout almost exclusively pertains to college students, and being academic, was pretty darn dry and repetitious. The content near the back of the book became more interesting as it delved into the subjects of sex, the popularity of "petting", the importance of dancing, and how other societal elements remained stagnant, such as racial bigotry, which stayed consistent along regional lines. In all, not a useless read, but it didn't live up to expectations, either.… (més)
 
Marcat
ladycato | Hi ha 1 ressenya més | Sep 8, 2018 |
In this book, Paula Fass looks at parenting and childhood against the social, political and cultural changes of each era from the late 18th century in the aftermath of the Revolutionary War, to the modern era of "helicopter" parents. She also discusses the advent of the science of child development and that of birth control, and the revolution in education. I found some of the eras more interesting than others, particularly the effects on families in the aftermath of both the Revolutionary War and the Civil War most interesting. In the aftermath of the Revolutionary War, when, as it happened, fathers were more involved in their children's lives, children were encouraged to be more independent and were considered more equal to their parents than European children of time were. In the aftermath of the Civil War, there was a move by some to assist children of African Americans who had been separated from their parents in slavery to be reunited with them, and much attention went to the many war orphans in cities and children exploited in factory work.

Some may find the modern era to be far more interesting - Dr Spock, Erik Erickson, immigration, the image of the "bad mother,"the expansion of the middle class in the 50s and the freedoms that came with it, American faith in education and the creation of the high school, and the anxiety of parenting today - to name a few of the topics touched upon. Fass covers a lot of territory in this relatively short book (under 300 pages), any part of which could fill volumes on its own. It's a concise, readable and intriguing journey through roughly 230 years of parenting and childhood history.
… (més)
1 vota
Marcat
avaland | Hi ha 2 ressenyes més | Jul 7, 2017 |
I'll say first of all that this IS an interesting book. But seriously... it's too long!
Many parts of the book are full of repetitions, concepts repeated over and over again, unnecessarily, so much so that many times I came to the point of thinking: "I don't believe it. She's really saying it AGAIN," and was tempted to just skip the part. I never actually did it, but still...

The first part was the more interesting for me. Well, I suppose that people who read about social history of family will know everything in here, but because I've never read about the subject, everything was new to me. Here's where the change in the relation between men and women is addressed quite in detail, a change that went on for nearly one century before coming to the revolution of the Twenties. The author explains the way and the reasons why a change inside the couple was possible and desirable at this time in history, and why in the Twenties relationships became more companionable, more intimate, more based on trust and sharing. Why and how this affected the way parents treated children, an so why in the Twenties young people had so much freedom in comparison with all the generations that came before.
There are quite e few repetition here too, but because I was so engaged in the subject matter, I didn't really mind.

The part about the discussion that went on in the Twenties about young in general and young women in particular, though interesting, was a bit too abstract in my opinion and went on too much.
Bu the real trial for me was the middle part.
Here the author addresses campus life. Really, I nearly couldn't stand it. She repeats the same three or four concepts over and over and over and over again, so that it might have been interesting the first time, but because of the obsessive repetition I just couldn't stand it. And honestly, from what I read, I don't think campus life was so interesting to devote so much time and words to it.

The last part is what I expected the book to talk about before I read it: actual behaviour of young people in the Twenties and why they acted like that. Why young women started bobbing their hair, why they started shedding layers and layers of dressing, why they started using cosmetics. How young men reacted. What young people considered inappropriate as opposed to what they parents considered inappropriate.
I really enjoyed this part. Shame that it was so short.

So on the whole I would recommend the book to anyone interested in social history, especially of the Twenties. Just keep a good stock of patience at hand... or prepare yourself to skipping quite a few pages.
… (més)
 
Marcat
JazzFeathers | Hi ha 1 ressenya més | Jul 27, 2016 |
The peculiarities of American childhood among Western nations, Fass argues, have long been in place, since authoritarian control over children gave way very early to increased freedom even before the American Revolution. “Europeans often described American children as rude, unmannerly, and bold. Americans were eager also to see themselves as different—fresher, newer, younger.” Wide availability of land, the ability to move away from constraining relations, and lack of specific laws governing inheritance lowered parents’ ability to control their children, even in the early generations of the United States when children went to work early in life because of persistent labor shortages. Work, in fact, provided young people with “a sense of the importance of their contribution and of their ability to create their own place in the world.” “Nowhere,” a nineteenth­century French commentator said, “are children so free, so bold, such enfants terrible, as in America.” (Compare Lincoln’s unwillingness to discipline his children.) So complaints about our manners are old hat.

Fass also spends time on the dangers of the nineteenth century: “By the time they were sixteen, one-third of all slave children had been separated from their parents by sale or transfer, and this was likely an underestimation because it is based on the experiences of former slaves interviewed in the 1930s who were still young at the end of the war.” Nor was this experience of loss absent outside of slavery: “Before they turned twenty, almost half of American children in the decades from 1860 to 1880 had lost one parent.”

Industrialization and the end of slavery, Fass argues, crystallized a perceived crisis in children’s lives, leading to a public focus on protection for children and the use of public institutions “when parents seemed inadequate to the task.” While poorer and immigrant families required children’s labor to survive, “[t]he new standards of the family were class standards as the reformers incorporated class ideals into the very notion of family decency.” By the late nineteenth century, children faced new restrictions, and fostering desirable independence and good habits then became a problem to be solved by science and professionals.

By the 1930s, mothers (and immigrants), in particular, were supposed to look outside the home to learn childrearing principles. These principles were supposed to produce the independent child valued by American culture, but this was a challenge because improved health care and lower birth rates allowed American mothers to focus more resources and attention on each child, creating the perceived risk of coddling.

Astonishingly, from 1890 to 1930, the U.S. built an average of one high school per day, and high school enrollment rose from 18 to 73 percent from 1910 to 1940; these numbers were unequaled by any other country for a long time. As a high school education became more important, the resulting extended period of non-work and non-home immersion with peers shaped adolescence in uniquely American ways. High school meant a new kind of independence from parents while children were still economically dependent. Also, professionalization across occupations meant that there were fewer ways for children to make their own paths; they increasingly had to adjust to the larger society in order to succeed, but that didn’t require obedience to parents any more. Instead, especially among immigrant children, peers and teachers taught the American ethos. Kurt Vonnegut said in 1970: “High school is closer to the core of the American experience than anything else I can think of.” (Fass doesn’t talk much about what high school was like—or, often, not like—for African-Americans, especially in the South.)

This extended period of non-working life, Fass suggests, eventually lay the groundwork for the student protests of the 1960s as well as sexual experimentation. She points out: “Had [college students] been raised at an earlier time, most would have been considered adults.” In a nod to my latest fandom, she notes that Todd Gitlin, one of the New Left’s leaders, was the same age as Alexander Hamilton when he became Washington’s right hand man.

Getting to today, Fass contends that what’s different is that childbearing is no longer seen as part of the natural order, and instead is treated as a choice (that no one else, including society at large, is under any duty to support). Compared to European parents who emphasize regularity and family time, American parents are more likely to emphasize individual attention and active interaction to develop a child’s independence—which leaves them (us) exhausted! Terrified that the slightest error will mean that their children will fall out of the middle/upper class, wealthier parents seek as much control as possible. The result is that children are encouraged to make choices without real responsibility: “over­controlled and over­indulged at the same time, while mothers are run ragged.” The fact that schooling has to last so long delays the perks of adulthood; high schools aren’t adequate stopping points for middle-class aspirations, and they also don’t provide enough vocational preparation. So high school isn’t the transition into adulthood any more, and no one really knows what is.

Kids in immigrant families face their own special challenges, when parents’ “lack of facility with the English language, unfamiliarity with the culture and with how American institutions operate provide one child with the opportunity to become mature, dependable, and knowledgeable long before similarly aged or placed American children are.” Such kids can feel unprepared for the adult matters they’re exposed to, and overworked, but they also get to be resourceful and upset the usual hierarchies in their families. While high schools were previously a force for assimilation, in the last third of the twentieth century they resegregated with a vengeance, so “[t]hose students who moved most strongly away from their parents’ culture moved toward peer cultures and values that were not middle class and devalued schooling.”
… (més)
 
Marcat
rivkat | Hi ha 2 ressenyes més | May 8, 2016 |

Llistes

Potser també t'agrada

Autors associats

Estadístiques

Obres
13
També de
2
Membres
280
Popularitat
#83,034
Valoració
½ 3.4
Ressenyes
6
ISBN
35

Gràfics i taules