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I Could Not Call Her Mother - The Stepmother in American Popular Culture, 1750-1960 (Hardcover)
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I Could Not Call Her Mother - The Stepmother in American Popular Culture, 1750-1960 (Hardcover)
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Stories of the stepmother, the substitute mother, or the "other
mother" have infused popular culture for centuries and continue to
do so today. She plays a substantial role in our collective
imagination, whether we are a part of a step family or not. Despite
the fact that the stepmother remains a prevalent figure, both in
popular culture and reality, scholars have largely avoided
addressing this fraught figure. I Could Not Call Her Mother
explores representations of the stepmother in American popular
culture from the colonial period to 1960. The archetypal stepmother
appears from nineteenth-century romance novels and advice
literature to 1930s pulp fiction and film noir. Leslie J.
Lindenauer argues that when considered in her historic context, the
stepmother serves as a bellwether for changing constructions of
motherhood and family. She examines popular culture's role in
shaping and reflecting an increasingly normative middle class
definition of the ideal mother and family, which by the 1920s
became the dominant construct. Lindenauer adds to the rich and
growing literature on the history of motherhood. It echoes and is
informed by the scholarship that has defined ideal motherhood as a
moving target, historically constructed. In so doing, it
illuminates the relationship between ideal motherhood and ideal
womanhood.
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