Managing boys forming masculinity in nineteenth-century United States literature and culture /
Abstract (Summary)
“Managing Boys: Forming Masculinity in Nineteenth-Century United States Literature
and Culture” explores theories of boyhood pedagogy advanced by an important group of
New England authors and educators, including Bronson and Louisa May Alcott, Mark
Twain, Jacob Abbott, Catharine Sedgwick, and Harriet Beecher Stowe. Building on the
work of sociologists, historians, and literary critics such as Michael Kimmel, Mary Ryan,
Lora Romero, and Richard Brodhead, I engage a wide range of texts--fiction, advice
manuals, and educational writings--to show that boyhood pedagogy played a crucial role
in the literary and social projects of many influential New England authors. My
dissertation reveals that these writers radically disagreed about the nature of boys, the
appropriate disciplinary strategies for them, and the dynamics of the mother-son
relationship, issues at the center of nineteenth-century theories of domesticity. Since
most educators of the period defined boyhood pedagogy by comparing it to girlhood
pedagogy, I argue that we need to look at both together to understand what is distinctive
to each. Relying upon feminist criticism and history, my four chapters examine play,
corporal punishment, sympathy, and shame within girlhood and boyhood pedagogy. I
look at the powerful and similar functions that disciplinary forms of shame and sacrifice
served in both boys’ and girls’ fiction by focusing on characters like the often-overlooked
male protagonist of Little Women in conjunction with contemporary success manuals for
young men. Critics of Alcott’s novel read it as a story of female submission, but I argue
throughout my dissertation that novelists like Alcott, as well as many other cultural
authorities, endorsed numerous forms of submission for boys. Yet my project illuminates
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important differences; beliefs about boys’ and girls’ contrasting emotional and
intellectual capacities inform many writers’ endorsement of corporal punishment for boys
and their rejection of the practice for girls. Ultimately, I argue that boyhood, which has
often been treated as an unproblematic category, is a construct that was rigorously
debated throughout nineteenth-century culture.
Bibliographical Information:
Advisor:
School:University of Virginia
School Location:USA - Virginia
Source Type:Master's Thesis
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