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American Girls and Global Responsibility brings together insights
from Cold War culture studies, girls' studies, and the history of
gender and militarization to shed new light on how age and gender
work together to form categories of citizenship. Jennifer Helgren
argues that a new internationalist girl citizenship took root in
the country in the years following World War II in youth
organizations such as Camp Fire Girls, Girl Scouts, YWCA Y-Teens,
schools, and even magazines like Seventeen. She shows the
particular ways that girls' identities and roles were configured,
and reveals the links between internationalist youth culture,
mainstream U.S. educational goals, and the U.S. government in
creating and marketing that internationalist girl, thus shaping the
girls' sense of responsibilities as citizens.
As the twentieth century dawned, progressive educators established
a national organization for adolescent girls to combat what they
believed to be a crisis of girls’ education. A corollary to the
Boy Scouts of America, founded just a few years earlier, the Camp
Fire Girls became America’s first and, for two decades, most
popular girls’ organization. Based on Protestant middle-class
ideals—a regulatory model that reinforced hygiene, habit
formation, hard work, and the idea that women related to the nation
through service—the Camp Fire Girls invented new concepts of
American girlhood by inviting disabled girls, Black girls,
immigrants, and Native Americans to join. Though this often meant a
false sense of cultural universality, in the girls’ own hands
membership was often profoundly empowering and provided
marginalized girls spaces to explore the meaning of their own
cultures in relation to changes taking place in twentieth-century
America. Through the lens of the Camp Fire Girls, Jennifer Helgren
traces the changing meanings of girls’ citizenship in the
cultural context of the twentieth century. Drawing on girls’
scrapbooks, photographs, letters, and oral history interviews, in
addition to adult voices in organization publications and speeches,
The Camp Fire Girls explores critical intersections of gender,
race, class, nation, and disability.
As the twentieth century dawned, progressive educators established
a national organization for adolescent girls to combat what they
believed to be a crisis of girls' education. A corollary to the Boy
Scouts of America, founded just a few years earlier, the Camp Fire
Girls became America's first and, for two decades, most popular
girls' organization. Based on Protestant middle-class ideals-a
regulatory model that reinforced hygiene, habit formation, hard
work, and the idea that women related to the nation through
service-the Camp Fire Girls invented new concepts of American
girlhood by inviting disabled girls, Black girls, immigrants, and
Native Americans to join. Though this often meant a false sense of
cultural universality, in the girls' own hands membership was often
profoundly empowering and provided marginalized girls spaces to
explore the meaning of their own cultures in relation to changes
taking place in twentieth-century America. Through the lens of the
Camp Fire Girls, Jennifer Helgren traces the changing meanings of
girls' citizenship in the cultural context of the twentieth
century. Drawing on girls' scrapbooks, photographs, letters, and
oral history interviews, in addition to adult voices in
organization publications and speeches, The Camp Fire Girls
explores critical intersections of gender, race, class, nation, and
disability.
Girlhood, interdisciplinary and global in source, scope, and
methodology, examines the centrality of girlhood in shaping women's
lives. Scholars study how age and gender, along with a multitude of
other identities, work together to influence the historical
experience. Spanning a broad time frame from 1750 to the present,
essays illuminate the various continuities and differences in
girls' lives across culture and region girls on all continents
except Antarctica are represented. Case studies and essays are
arranged thematically to encourage comparisons between girls'
experiences in diverse locales, and to assess how girls were
affected by historical developments such as colonialism, political
repression, war, modernisation, shifts in labour markets,
migrations, and the rise of consumer culture.
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