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Defining Deviance
A01=Michael Rembis
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America
American history
analyses
Author_Michael Rembis
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Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=HBJK
Category=JBFM
Category=JBSF1
Category=JFFG
Category=JFSJ1
Category=JKV
Category=NHK
change
class
COP=United States
delinquency
Delivery_Delivery within 10-20 working days
deviance
diagnose
diagnosis
disability
disability studies
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
eugenics
gender
gender studies
Geneva
girls
history
Illinois
institution
institutionalized
involuntary commitment laws
juvenile
Language_English
PA=Available
power
Price_€20 to €50
PS=Active
psychology
reform
reformers
science
sex
softlaunch
State Training School
teenage
treatment
troubled
women
working class
Product details
- ISBN 9780252079276
- Weight: 399g
- Dimensions: 156 x 235mm
- Publication Date: 01 Feb 2013
- Publisher: University of Illinois Press
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Paperback
- Language: English
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Defining Deviance analyzes how reformers in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries perceived delinquent girls and their often troubled lives. Drawing on exclusive access to thousands of case files and other documents at the State Training School in Geneva, Illinois, Michael A. Rembis uses Illinois as a case study to show how implementation of involuntary commitment laws in the United States reflected eugenic thinking about juvenile delinquency. Much more than an institutional history, Defining Deviance examines the cases of vulnerable young women to reveal the centrality of sex, class, gender, and disability in the formation of scientific and social reform. Rembis recounts the contestations between largely working-class teenage girls and the mostly female reformers and professionals who attempted to diagnose and treat them based on changing ideas of eugenics, gender, and impairment. He shows how generational roles and prevailing notions of gender and sexuality influenced reformers to restrict, control, and institutionalize undesirable "defectives" within society, and he details the girls' attempts to influence methods of diagnosis, discipline, and reform. In tracing the historical evolution of ideologies of impairment and gender to show the central importance of gender to the construction of disability, Rembis reveals the larger national implications of the cases at the State Training School. His study provides new insights into the treatment of young women whom the dominant society perceived as threats to the sexual and eugenic purity of modern America.
Michael A. Rembis is the director of the Center for Disability Studies and an assistant professor of history at the University at Buffalo.
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