Lexington Books
Pages: 196
Trim: 6 x 9
978-0-7391-6681-9 • Hardback • November 2013 • $108.00 • (£83.00)
978-1-4985-2050-8 • Paperback • August 2015 • $51.99 • (£40.00)
978-0-7391-6682-6 • eBook • November 2013 • $49.00 • (£38.00)
Leslie J. Lindenauer is associate professor of history at Western Connecticut State University.
Acknowledgments
Prologue: A Tale of Two Stepmothers
Introduction
Chapter One: ‘Unbounded in her Malice’: From Witches to Stepmothers in Early America
Chapter Two: ‘I Could Not Call Her Mother’: The Stepmother and Middle Class Virtue in Antebellum America
Chapter Three: The Substitute Mother in the Nineteenth Century: Gender, Race, and Parenthood
Chapter Four: The Educated [Step] Mother: The Stepmother and the Science of Motherhood in the Progressive Era
Chapter Five: The Family in the Funhouse Mirror: Periodicals, Pulps, and Film, 1920-1945
Chapter Six: Tunnel of Love: Motherhood Composed in the Post-War Era
Selected Bibliography
Using popular magazines, novels, films, television programs, and professional and prescriptive literature, Lindenauer describes the archetypal, fairy-tale stepmother through US history from the mid-18th century to the 1950s. The author posits that in response to various factors--industrialism, urbanization, economic depression, war, the breakup of the nuclear family, and the ensuing legal, social, economic, and cultural upheavals--the socially constructed image of the stepmother oscillated between the evil stepmother and the good stepmother. The representation of the stepmother in popular culture began as a negative one, embodied as the evil witch of fairy tales and the 17th-century Salem witchcraft trials and continuing with the evil stepmother in the 18th and first half of the 19th centuries. The image changed into the sympathetic stepmother between 1860 and 1917, then returned to a darker and more threatening image under the influence of psychotherapy during the Great Depression and WW II, only to be rehabilitated as the good stepmother in service to childless couples looking to adopt and single fathers needing wives in the 1950s. For anyone interested in stepmothers, family history, women's studies, and popular culture. Summing Up: Recommended. Lower-division and upper-division undergraduates.
— Choice Reviews