Vita
Rebecca Jo Plant is an assistant professor of history.
She received her Ph.D. from Johns Hopkins in 2001. Her work focuses on
gender relations and the rise of the psychological professions in the
twentieth-century American culture. Currently, she is writing a book on
the history of motherhood.
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Publications
- "William Menninger's Campaign
to Reform American Psychoanalysis, 1946-1948," History of Psychiatry,
16:2 (2005): 181-202.
- "The Veteran,
His Wife, and Their Mothers: Prescriptions for Psychological Rehabilitation
after World War II," in Tales of the Great American Victory:
World War II in Politics and Poetics, eds. Diederik Oostdijk and
Markha G. Valenta, Amsterdam: Vrije University Press, 2006, pp. 95-100.
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Courses Taught
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Research
- Maternalism Reconsidered: Motherhood, Welfare and
Social Policy in the Twentieth-Century, eds. Rebecca Jo Plant,
Nichole Sanders and Lori Weintrob and Marian van der Klein, Berghahn
Press, to appear in 2007. This volume explores how ideas about motherhood
affected the development and implementation of social welfare policies
in a wide range of national and international contexts in the twentieth
century. The essays expand upon and reassess 'maternalism', a concept
that has figured prominently in discussions of gender and the welfare
state since the early 1900s. Consisting of eleven essays that focus
on nine different nations and regions, the volume showcases recent innovative
scholarship on the connections between welfare regimes, nation states
and gender ideologies. My own contribution, entitled "Gold Star
Mothers: Patriotic Maternalists and Their Critics in Interwar America,"
focuses on a remarkable government programme that sent more than 6,000
mothers and wives of World War I dead to Europe in the early 1930s to
witness the gravesites of their loved ones.
- The Repeal of Mother Love: Momism and the Reconstruction
of Motherhood in Philip Wylie's America explores the transformation
of motherhood as a social role, a cultural ideal and a subjective identity
in the U.S. from 1920 to the 1970s. It charts a shift away from a tendency
to exalt maternal love as the most selfless of human sentiments, toward
a more skeptical and psychological view of motherhood. It also explores
the widespread implications of this anti-maternal strain, which affected
everything from women's political activities to intimate relationships
within the home.
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