Child-Mothers and Invisible Fathers: The Paradox of "Precocious Maternity" and the Pervasiveness of Child Sexual Abuse in Nineteenth-Century America

IF 0.6 3区 历史学 Q1 HISTORY
C. E. Thompson
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Abstract:Medical and popular periodicals in nineteenth-century America frequently announced noteworthy cases of "precocious maternity"—children as young as eight giving birth. Physicians investigated the causes of precocious maternity, focusing on the influence of climate and race in particular. Newspapers, meanwhile, competed to identify the "youngest mother" in a given city, state, or nation. This focus on maternity obscured paternity: fathers were often left out of accounts of very young mothers. Late nineteenth-century interest in precocious maternity illuminates contemporaneous concerns with the line between childhood and adulthood as well as the stakes of moral purity crusades and age-of-consent debates. Drawing on more than fifty cases of pregnant children, this essay investigates the paradox of the "child-mother" to reveal the intersection of race, gender, sexuality, and age in nineteenth-century culture and medicine, the instability of the categories of childhood and adulthood, and the erasure of child sexual abuse in history.
儿童母亲和隐形父亲:“早熟母性”的悖论和19世纪美国儿童性虐待的普遍存在
摘要:19世纪美国的医学和通俗期刊经常报道值得注意的“早孕”案例——年仅8岁的孩子就分娩了。医生调查了早孕的原因,特别关注气候和种族的影响。与此同时,报纸争相在某个城市、州或国家选出“最年轻的母亲”。这种对母性的关注掩盖了父亲的身份:父亲经常被排除在非常年轻的母亲的描述之外。19世纪晚期对早熟生育的兴趣,阐明了当时对童年和成年之间界限的关注,以及道德纯洁运动和年龄同意辩论的利害关系。本文通过50多个怀孕儿童的案例,研究了“孩子母亲”的悖论,揭示了19世纪文化和医学中种族、性别、性和年龄的交集,童年和成年类别的不稳定性,以及历史上对儿童性虐待的抹去。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
33
期刊介绍: Journal of Women"s History is the first journal devoted exclusively to the international field of women"s history. It does not attempt to impose one feminist "line" but recognizes the multiple perspectives captured by the term "feminisms." Its guiding principle is a belief that the divide between "women"s history" and "gender history" can be, and is, bridged by work on women that is sensitive to the particular historical constructions of gender that shape and are shaped by women"s experience.
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