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No. 9 |
Winter 2007 |
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A Message from SHCY President Kriste Lindenmeyer “Pushing the Baby Carriage” On Behalf of the History of Children and Youth I recently attended the American Historical Association’s meeting. The AHA is the premier scholarly organization for historians in the United States. It attracts more than 2500 attendees annually and runs 3.5 days of panels and other presentations. It was nice to see that things seemed more upbeat than usual. Perhaps the fact that the job market in academic history has opened a little contributed to the more optimistic atmosphere. Still, I was struck by the limited attention paid to children’s and youth history by the association and historians in general. Oh, it was there, if you looked for it. The book exhibit reflected some of the exciting new research being done in the field. Nonetheless, a look at the indexes in most new works not specifically focused on children or youth showed how far we still have to go. Few scholars bothered to include terms like children, childhood, teens, adolescence, etc. in their indexes, and I suspect, in their text. None of the academic employer conducting interviews at the meeting advertised for historians of children and youth. Thinking about the situation on my flight home, I was reminded of a speech Grace Abbott gave in 1931 when she was chief of the U.S. Children’s Bureau. It seems that the metaphors she used to describe her feelings about working for child welfare policy amid a federal bureaucracy also apply to the situation for scholars interested in children’s and youth history.
Of course many scholars complain that their field of research does not receive the attention it deserves. Instead of condemning our colleagues for not embracing our interests, I urge historians of children and youth to think about ways to better integrate the history of young people into the mainstream. In other words, what strategies can be used to bring children’s history into topics that are already generally defined as essential for understanding the human experience? Children’s lives and shifts in the social construction of childhood reflect important transformations. Like the proverbial canary in the mine, including the experiences of a society’s children and youth helps to provide new insights about the past that are obvious when focused only on adults. In my own work, looking at the history of children and adolescents in the United States’ Great Depression helped to explain why some New Deal policies contributed to shaping new social and familial patterns in the United States long after the economic crisis ended. The experiences of young Americans also highlighted the dramatic social costs of the Great Depression and the resiliency of youthful optimism. I am personally very optimistic that the upcoming 2007 SHCY conference (June 27-30) in Sweden will help to further promote the history of children and youth as an part essential element for understanding the past. Please join us for a very exciting and historic meeting. The program committee received more than 170 paper proposals. They have put together what promises to be an exceptional program that includes scholars from many parts of the world. For more information go to the SHCY conference website at: http://www.liu.se/shcy2007/. Early registration ends April 1st. See you in Norrköping! |