Kriste Lindenmeyer
DeLuzio exhibits a masterful understanding of the range of ideas shaping concepts of female adolescence in America from the mid-nineteenth century through the first half of the twentieth century... The most comprehensive study of the topic to date.
Kriste Lindenmeyer, President of the Society for the History of Children and Youth, author of The Greatest Generation Grows Up: Childhood in 1930s America
James Marten
It is interdisciplinary history at its best and, I might add, 'gendered' history at its finest... It makes an original contribution to the nearly constant struggle by historians (and parents, for that matter) to define, explain, and understand the construction of youth and adolescence in American life.
James Marten, Marquette University, author of The Children's Civil War
Paula Fass
A thoroughly researched and arresting synthesis of the medico-social views of female adolescence over the crucial period 1830--1930, when American views of adolescence were formulated. DeLuzio's scholarship here is exemplary and she has chosen and assembled the important texts and analyzed them with great insight.
Paula Fass, University of California, Berkeley, Editor-in-Chief of the Encyclopedia of Children and Childhood in History and Society
Julia Grant
A major contribution to many overlapping fields of scholarship -- the history of childhood, women, developmental psychology, and education. It displays remarkable erudition and promises to substantially deepen our understanding of the contribution of social scientists in constructing the representation of adolescent girls in the past two centuries.
Julia Grant, Michigan State University, author of Raising Baby by the Book: The Education of American Parents
From the Publisher
A major contribution to many overlapping fields of scholarship—the history of childhood, women, developmental psychology, and education. It displays remarkable erudition and promises to substantially deepen our understanding of the contribution of social scientists in constructing the representation of adolescent girls in the past two centuries.—Julia Grant, Michigan State University, author of Raising Baby by the Book: The Education of American Parents
It is interdisciplinary history at its best and, I might add, 'gendered' history at its finest . . . It makes an original contribution to the nearly constant struggle by historians (and parents, for that matter) to define, explain, and understand the construction of youth and adolescence in American life.—James Marten, Marquette University, author of The Children’s Civil War
A thoroughly researched and arresting synthesis of the medico-social views of female adolescence over the crucial period 1830–1930, when American views of adolescence were formulated. DeLuzio's scholarship here is exemplary and she has chosen and assembled the important texts and analyzed them with great insight.—Paula Fass, University of California, Berkeley, Editor-in-Chief of the Encyclopedia of Children and Childhood in History and Society
DeLuzio exhibits a masterful understanding of the range of ideas shaping concepts of female adolescence in America from the mid-nineteenth century through the first half of the twentieth century . . . The most comprehensive study of the topic to date. —Kriste Lindenmeyer, President of the Society for the History of Children and Youth, author of The Greatest Generation Grows Up: Childhood in 1930s America