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Research Article

Domestication as Reform: A Study of the Socialization of Wayward Girls, 1856-1905

Barbara Brenzel
Harvard Educational Review July 1980, 50 (2) 196-213; DOI: https://doi.org/10.17763/haer.50.2.r3p6671684776528
Barbara Brenzel
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Abstract

Barbara Brenzel examines nineteenth-century juvenile reform policies by telling the story of Lancaster, a progressive reform school for girls in Massachusetts. Analyzing the efforts of reformers to socialize poor girls, many of whom were immigrants, she describes the contradictory dual purposes underlying these policies—fear and benevolence. The discussion of Lancaster illustrates how particular policies and programs for potentially deviant girls reflected nineteenth-century thought about reform, childhood,poverty, and especially the role of women in society.

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Harvard Educational Review
Vol. 50, Issue 2
1 Jul 1980
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Domestication as Reform: A Study of the Socialization of Wayward Girls, 1856-1905
Barbara Brenzel
Harvard Educational Review Jul 1980, 50 (2) 196-213; DOI: 10.17763/haer.50.2.r3p6671684776528

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Domestication as Reform: A Study of the Socialization of Wayward Girls, 1856-1905
Barbara Brenzel
Harvard Educational Review Jul 1980, 50 (2) 196-213; DOI: 10.17763/haer.50.2.r3p6671684776528
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