journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21850792/-we-share-a-sacred-secret-gender-domesticity-and-containment-in-transvestia-s-histories-and-letters-from-crossdressers-and-their-wives
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Robert Hill
After WWII in the United States, gender and sexual minorities began to construct social identities in a cold war climate hostile to gender and sexual transgression. The coming of the sexual revolution in the mid-1960s and 1970s unleashed forces that provided opportunities for these groups to demarcate their differences from one another, achieve visibility, and court public favor in a more permissive and tolerant society. In this article, I examine how a cohort of white, heterosexual crossdressers and their wives forged a redeeming social script in ways that seem counterintuitive to the "spirit of the times...
2011: Journal of Social History
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21847846/reading-baby-books-medicine-marketing-money-and-the-lives-of-american-infants
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Janet Golden, Lynn Weiner
This article examines American baby books from the late nineteenth through the twentieth century. Baby books are ephemeral publications—formatted with one or more printed pages for recording developmental, health, and social information about infants and often including personal observations, artifacts such as photographs or palm prints, medical and other prescriptive advice, and advertisements. For historians they serve as records of the changing social and cultural worlds of infancy, offering insights into the interplay of childrearing practices and larger social movements...
2011: Journal of Social History
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21197808/-no-fertile-soil-for-pathogens-rayon-advertising-and-biopolitics-in-late-weimar-germany
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yvette Florio Lane
Recent research on twentieth-century German history has begun to re-examine the centrality of race as a category of analysis. While not discounting its importance in the shaping and enacting of Nazi policies and practices, race is seen instead as one among many factors leading to the crimes of the Nazi regime. In this paper, the author considers the role consumerist desires and fantasies played in the wider context of the inter-war European fascination with notions of technology, "hygiene," democracy, and modernity...
2010: Journal of Social History
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21197807/streets-and-stages-urban-renewal-and-the-arts-after-world-war-ii
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Julia L Foulkes
Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts in Manhattan and the revitalization of the Brooklyn Academy of Music in Brooklyn offer insights into the intersection of arts and urbanization after World War II. This intra-city comparison shows the aggrandizing pull of the international arena in the shaping of Lincoln Center and the arts it featured in contrast to the local focus and debate that transformed how BAM fit into its Brooklyn neighborhood. The performing arts, bound as they are to a moment fused in space and time, reveal the making of place within grandiose formal buildings as well as outside on the streets that surround them—and it is, perhaps, that tensile connection between stages and streets that informs the relevancy of both the institution and the arts it features...
2010: Journal of Social History
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21197806/microcosms-of-democracy-imagining-the-city-neighborhood-in-world-war-ii-era-america
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Benjamin Looker
This essay sketches the rise of a Popular Front-inflected vision of the U.S. city neighborhood's meaning and worth, a communitarian ideal that reached its zenith during World War II before receding in the face of cold-war anxieties, postwar suburbanization, and trepidation over creeping blight. During the war years, numerous progressives interpreted the ethnic-accented urban neighborhood as place where national values became most concrete, casting it as a uniquely American rebuff to the fascist drive for purity...
2010: Journal of Social History
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21197805/sculpted-landscapes-art-place-in-cleveland-s-cultural-gardens-1916-2006
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mark Tebeau
Perhaps the world's first peace garden, the Cleveland Cultural Gardens embody the history of twentieth-century America and reveal the complex interrelations between art and place. This essay uses the Cleveland Cultural Gardens as a lens through which to explore how art and place have intersected over time. It explores how communities have negotiated questions of national, ethnic, and American identity and embedded those identities into the vernacular landscape. It considers how the particulars of place were embedded into a public garden and asks whether it is possible for public art to transcend its place—both in terms of geography and history...
2010: Journal of Social History
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21140932/this-harlem-life-black-families-and-everyday-life-in-the-1920s-and-1930s
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Stephen Robertson, Shane White, Stephen Garton, Graham White
This article uses Probation Department files to reconstruct the lives of five ordinary residents of Harlem. It highlights what that black metropolis offered those outside the political and cultural elite, who have dominated historical scholarship, showing how ordinary blacks negotiated the challenges of life in northern neighborhoods, and drew on institutions and organizations, to establish and sustain new lives. We offer the kind of individualized perspective on everyday life that other scholars have provided for high culture, but which does not exist for other realms of existence in Harlem, even in early twentieth century sociological studies of black life...
2010: Journal of Social History
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20939145/-killed-by-its-mother-infanticide-in-providence-county-rhode-island-1870-to-1938
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Simone Caron
This article analyzes infanticide based on the Coroners' Records for Providence County, Rhode Island, from the 1870s to 1938 to determine doctors' and coroners' attitudes toward mothers who killed. The nineteenth century witnessed a medical discourse on the possibility of postpartum insanity as a cause of infanticide. While some women claimed temporary insanity, and some doctors and coroners legitimated this defense, its application to mothers who killed was arbitrary. They determined who deserved this diagnosis based on the woman's character, her forthrightness, and extenuating circumstances...
2010: Journal of Social History
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20939144/-bessie-done-cut-her-old-man-race-common-law-marriage-and-homicide-in-new-orleans-1925-1945
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jeffrey S Adler
This essay examines domestic homicide in early twentieth-century New Orleans. African-American residents killed their domestic partners at eight times the rate of white New Orleanians, and these homicides were most often committed by women, who killed their partners at fifteen times the rate of white women. Common-law marriages proved to be especially violent among African-American residents. Based on nearly two hundred cases identified in police records and other sources as partner killings between 1925 and 1945, this analysis compares lethal violence in legal marriages and in common-law unions...
2010: Journal of Social History
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20939143/-the-attila-the-hun-law-new-york-s-rockefeller-drug-laws-and-the-making-of-a-punitive-state
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Julilly Kohler-Hausmann
In 1973, New York's Governor Nelson Rockefeller responded to panic about soaring heroin use by renouncing his aggressive treatment programs and enacting the most punitive drug policy in the United States. His "Rockefeller Drug Laws" mandated sentences up to life in prison for selling any narcotics. These punishments, comparable to the penalties for murder, served as models for subsequent "War on Drugs" policies enacted across the nation.This article explores the ideological and political work accomplished by this high profile legislation—for policy makers, for members of the general public who clamored for "get tough" strategies, and for the drug users targeted by the statutes...
2010: Journal of Social History
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20939142/regime-change-gender-class-and-the-invention-of-dieting-in-post-bellum-america
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Katharina Vester
"Regime Change" argues against commonly held interpretations that see dieting as a practice established in the 1920s to control women at a time when they gained suffrage and greater economic independence. This article offers an alternative reading, arguing that diet advice literature arrived in the US in the 1860s and originally targeted a male, white, middle-class audience. While the hegemonic beauty ideal for the female body was at its heftiest, men started to build muscle and reduce weight. The ideal of the slender male body was associated with white superiority, social mobility and the national ambition for an American empire...
2010: Journal of Social History
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20939141/diseased-maimed-mutilated-categorizations-of-disability-and-an-ugly-law-in-late-nineteenth-century-chicago
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Adrienne Phelps Coco
The article places Chicago's "ugly" law—an 1881 municipal ordinance that fined "any person who is diseased, maimed, mutilated or in any way deformed so as to be an unsightly or disgusting object" for appearing in public—within the context of late nineteenth-century imaginings of disability. Drawing on the framework of disability studies, this paper demonstrates that nineteenth-century understandings of disability had little to do with the impairments of individuals but instead were tied to the status of the person with the disability...
2010: Journal of Social History
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20939140/-we-mentally-ill-smoke-a-lot-identity-smoking-and-mental-illness-in-america
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Laura Hirshbein
Most of the history of the tobacco industry over the last few decades has focused on the conflicts between tobacco industry leaders who promoted smoking and tobacco control advocates who warned of the health consequences. Yet a view of this conflict from the perspective of smokers who are also mentally ill raises questions about how to frame public health policy for these individuals. Mentally ill consumers wrote to the tobacco industry between the 1970s and 1990s and expressed their commitment to smoking and to cigarette companies, despite their awareness of the health risks...
2010: Journal of Social History
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21038727/partner-choice-and-homogamy-in-the-nineteenth-century-was-there-a-sexual-revolution-in-europe
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Marco H D van Leeuwen, Ineke Maas
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
2002: Journal of Social History
https://read.qxmd.com/read/17078174/inner-hygiene-constipation-and-the-pursuit-of-health-in-modern-society-review-of-whorton-j-c-inner-hygiene-constipation-and-the-pursuit-of-health-in-modern-society-new-york-oxford-u-pr-2000
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
https://read.qxmd.com/read/17078167/teaching-sex-the-shaping-of-adolescence-in-the-20th-century-review-of-moran-j-p-teaching-sex-the-shaping-of-adolescence-in-the-20th-century-cambridge-mass-harvard-u-pr-2000
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
https://read.qxmd.com/read/17078164/motherhood-in-black-and-white-race-and-sex-in-american-liberalism-1930-1965-review-of-feldstein-r-motherhood-in-black-and-white-race-and-sex-in-american-liberalism-1930-1965-ithaca-n-y-cornell-u-pr-2000
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
https://read.qxmd.com/read/16841431/like-our-very-own-adoption-and-the-changing-culture-of-motherhood-1851-1950-review-of-berebitsky-j-like-our-very-own-adoption-and-the-changing-culture-of-motherhood-1851-1950-lawrence-u-pr-of-kansas-2000
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
https://read.qxmd.com/read/16808042/sexual-liberation-or-sexual-license-the-american-revolt-against-victorian-sexuality-review-of-white-k-sexual-liberation-or-sexual-license-the-american-revolt-against-victorian-sexuality-chicago-ivan-r-dee-2000
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
https://read.qxmd.com/read/16808032/the-sanitary-city-urban-infrastructure-in-america-from-colonial-times-to-the-present-review-of-melosi-m-v-the-sanitary-city-urban-infrastructure-in-america-from-colonial-times-to-the-present-baltimore-johns-hopkins-u-pr-2000
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
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