The Essential Daughter: Changing Expectations for Girls at Home, 1797 to the Present

The Essential Daughter: Changing Expectations for Girls at Home, 1797 to the Present

by Mary Collins
The Essential Daughter: Changing Expectations for Girls at Home, 1797 to the Present

The Essential Daughter: Changing Expectations for Girls at Home, 1797 to the Present

by Mary Collins

Hardcover

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Overview

By age nine, Mary Ellen could start a fire and make breakfast for her family on the Great Plains as they traveled West. By age 11, Connie's family had her hanging the laundry and doing the dishes for a dozen people. By age 13, Beverly had no responsibilities at home and no confidence in herself. The portraits of 14 girls aged 6 to 14, when their ideas of duty and self remained in flux, are used as a starting point for discussion on how to bring daughters and their brothers back into the flow of American home life. The author explores how Americans might make girls feel essential on the home front without denying them the right of self-definition.

Few American parents expect their children to play an important role on the home front. The average daughter does fewer than ten hours of housework a week; sons do only two. What are the consequences of this dramatic cultural shift? Collins posits that nothing we can give our children in the public sphere can offset the loss. Collins concludes that Americans must rebuild a domestic culture that moves beyond the damaging sex-based division of labor so common in the past.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780275978365
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 11/30/2002
Pages: 184
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 0.50(d)

About the Author

MARY COLLINS is a freelance writer and researcher. She teaches nonfiction writing in the master's degree program at Johns Hopkins University. She has worked as a freelance writer and editor for National Geographic, the Smithsonian, and Time-Life Books for the past 12 years.

Table of Contents

Foreword
Introduction
Dutiful Daughters
Lizzie: Do What Anybody Desires of You
Lucy: Dutiful Helper
Mary Ellen: The Power to Set Things Going
Harriet and Louisa: Oh Child! Thou Art a Little Slave
Molly: A Romping Child
Adrift
Ethel and Amanda: The Suburban Girl and the Cook
Connie: I had 78 Pennies
Back Home
Tina and Beverly: "I got sort of lost"
Reaching Out and Away
Lynn: The Sports Star
Meggy, Ally, and Sarah: "We could do it"
Conclusion: A Domestic Revival
Epilogue: The Women They Became
Bibliography
Index

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