Situating gender and professional identity in American child study, 1880-1910 |
| |
Authors: | Noon David Hoogland |
| |
Affiliation: | University of Alaska Southeast. |
| |
Abstract: | The boundaries of psychological expertise in modern America were often imagined in gendered terms. Studies of child development served as one area where dominant notions of masculinity and femininity collided at a historical moment in which women were increasingly present inthe traditionally male worlds of science and higher education. Attributes that many female authors regarded as necessary qualifications for understanding child development (such as patience, sympathy, and maternal care) were routinely dismissed by male writers as contrary to an authentic scientific disposition. Thus, disputes over the meaning of child development (and the methods of studying it) indicate some of the ways that women's labor was both acknowledged and demoted during the formative years of American social science. |
| |
Keywords: | |
本文献已被 PubMed 等数据库收录! |
|