Constructing moral babies: the medical and scientific enterprise of infancy in America, 1850s-1920s
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Yang, Elisabeth Min Young.
Constructing moral babies: the medical and scientific enterprise of infancy in America, 1850s-1920s. Retrieved from
https://doi.org/doi:10.7282/t3-s14r-1536
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TitleConstructing moral babies: the medical and scientific enterprise of infancy in America, 1850s-1920s
Date Created2022
Other Date2022-01 (degree)
Extent216 pages
DescriptionConstructing “Moral Babies” traces the discourse on the moral agency of infants and how physicians, scientists, and child-rearing authorities have conceptualized infancy and morality in America from the 1850s to the 1920s. This dissertation is an intellectual and cultural history that takes an interdisciplinary approach—one that draws on the history of medicine, sociology, feminist theology, childhood studies, and material culture—, investigating a critical period in American history that saw the infant as a significant medical, scientific, political, and cultural object and subject. This dissertation contributes to existing historical scholarship by going beyond just affirming the entanglement of the moral, spiritual, and scientific in infant health and science to argue that the medical and scientific communities during this period frequently understood infants as moral agents, that is, as actively engaged in moral choices of their own accord. Drawing on various sources such as child-rearing manuals, domestic medicine guides, design books, and babies’ material culture, the dissertation argues that while historians have often viewed this period as the ascendancy of medicine’s focus on the physiological aspects of the infant, there were complex and lively debates on infants’ iii moral nature and understanding infants’ moral agency. The chapters of the dissertation explore the aforementioned topics in three different contexts: (1) the communities of scientific experts and the syncretism of science and religion that composed a nuanced and complex image of infants; (2) the asymmetric alliances forged between physicians and white, middle-class American mothers and the subtext of written counsel from expert to mother; and (3) the material world of babies, as imagined by medical prescriptions for the construction and design of nurseries, and the selection and use of baby furniture, toys, and devices. This project addresses fundamental questions of how morality was construed and how the infant was positioned and used in this enterprise. Introducing a marginalized figure, this dissertation foregrounds infants as innovative sites of inquiry about agency, citizenship, personhood, and morality.
NotePh.D.
NoteIncludes bibliographical references
NoteIncludes vita
Genretheses
LanguageEnglish
CollectionCamden Graduate School Electronic Theses and Dissertations
Organization NameRutgers, The State University of New Jersey
RightsThe author owns the copyright to this work.