Relative Intimacy: Fathers, Adolescent Daughters, and Postwar American Culture

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Univ of North Carolina Press, Mar 8, 2006 - Social Science - 272 pages
Celebrated as new consumers and condemned for their growing delinquencies, teenage girls emerged as one of the most visible segments of American society during and after World War II. Contrary to the generally accepted view that teenagers grew more alienated from adults during this period, Rachel Devlin argues that postwar culture fostered a father-daughter relationship characterized by new forms of psychological intimacy and tinged with eroticism.

According to Devlin, psychiatric professionals turned to the Oedipus complex during World War II to explain girls' delinquencies and antisocial acts. Fathers were encouraged to become actively involved in the clothing and makeup choices of their teenage daughters, thus domesticating and keeping under paternal authority their sexual maturation.

In Broadway plays, girls' and women's magazines, and works of literature, fathers often appeared as governing figures in their daughters' sexual coming of age. It became the common sense of the era that adolescent girls were fundamentally motivated by their Oedipal needs, dependent upon paternal sexual approval, and interested in their fathers' romantic lives. As Devlin demonstrates, the pervasiveness of depictions of father-adolescent daughter eroticism on all levels of culture raises questions about the extent of girls' independence in modern American society and the character of fatherhood during America's fabled embrace of domesticity in the 1940s and 1950s.

From inside the book

Contents

Introduction
1
Postwar Psychoanalysis Reinterprets the Adolescent Girl
17
CHAPTER 2 Delinquent Girls and the Crisis of Paternal Authority in the Postwar United States
48
Teenage Girls Consumerism and the Cultural Transformation of Fatherhood
78
A Paternal Rite of Passage 19481965
109
Situating Men in Relation to Adolescent Daughters
141
Epilogue
171
Notes
175
Bibliography
221
Index
245
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Page 110 - Invented tradition' is taken to mean a set of practices, normally governed by overtly or tacitly accepted rules and of a ritual or symbolic nature, which seek to inculcate certain values and norms of behaviour by repetition, which automatically implies continuity with the past.
Page 205 - Paula Giddings, When and Where I Enter: The Impact of Black Women on Race and Sex in America (New York: William Morrow, 1984...
Page 212 - E. Anthony Rotundo, American Manhood: Transformations in Masculinity from the Revolution to the Modern Era (New York: Basic Books, 1993...
Page 46 - They believe that the actual consummation of the incestuous relation, which constitutes a secondary process derived from a former grave state of melancholy, diminishes the subject's chance of psychosis and allows better adjustment to the external world.
Page 179 - Andreas Huyssen, After the Great Divide: Modernism, Mass Culture, Postmodernism (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1986...
Page 17 - Mother, you smile as if you saw your Father inches away yet hidden, as when he groused behind a screen over a National Geographic Magazine, whenever young men came to court back in those settled days of World War One.

About the author (2006)

Rachel Devlin is associate professor of history at Tulane University.

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