Crista (Southern Methodist University) DeLuzio 
Female Adolescence in American Scientific Thought, 1830–1930 [EPUB ebook] 

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In this groundbreaking study, Crista De Luzio asks how scientific experts conceptualized female adolescence in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Revisiting figures like G. Stanley Hall and Margaret Mead and casting her net across the disciplines of biology, psychology, and anthropology, De Luzio examines the process by which youthful femininity in America became a contested cultural category.

Challenging accepted views that professionals ‘invented’ adolescence during this period to understand the typical experiences of white middle-class boys, De Luzio shows how early attempts to reconcile that conceptual category with ‘femininity’ not only shaped the social science of young women but also forced child development experts and others to reconsider the idea of adolescence itself.

De Luzio’s provocative work permits a fuller understanding of how adolescence emerged as a ‘crisis’ in female development and offers insight into why female adolescence remains a social and cultural preoccupation even today.

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Format EPUB ● Pages 344 ● ISBN 9780801895913 ● Publisher Johns Hopkins University Press ● Published 2007 ● Downloadable 3 times ● Currency EUR ● ID 8157459 ● Copy protection Adobe DRM
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