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Although most nineteenth-century American parents relied staunchly on common sense in raising their children, by the 1920s parents were being urged to adopt a scientific approach to child rearing. Today, American parents are besieged with medical and psychological advice about bringing up "normal" children. In this survey of the education of American mothers, Julia Grant shows how the tides of opinion about proper child care have shifted from the early 1800s, when maternal associations discussed biblical and secular theories of child rearing, through the 1950s, when books like Spocks Baby and Child Care were widely consulted, to todays television advice-givers. Drawing on a wide range of historical sourcesfrom letters written to child-rearing experts to the minutes of mothers study clubsGrant provides access to the voices of mothers from diverse class and ethnic backgrounds, revealing the impact of "expert" advice on maternal thinking and practices. Grants review of child-rearing literature extends from Locke and Rousseau to Gesell, Ilg and Ames, Spock, Brazelton, Leach, and Elkind. She describes the "medicalization" of mothering, ongoing negotiations between mothers and professionals, and womens reactions to the experts recommendations. As mothers have increasingly sought assistance in the complex enterprise of raising children, Grant finds, they have become discriminating consumers of professional advicechoosing to follow it, ignore it, or adapt it to their individual circumstances.
- Format: Pocket/Paperback
- ISBN: 9780300195484
- Språk: Engelska
- Antal sidor: 320
- Utgivningsdatum: 1998-06-01
- Förlag: Yale University Press