Parents have sought advice on infant-care practices for generations, but a Rutgers-Camden professor is uncovering how those methods have evolved and influenced American culture.
Janet Golden, a professor of history at Rutgers-Camden, has earned a highly prestigious fellowship from the National Endowment for the Humanities to study the history of babies in modern America.
The $50,400 NEH "We the People" fellowship will allow Golden to research her forthcoming book, Infants and Infancy in 20th Century America.
The book will delve into how demographic factors like ethnicity and income shape the rearing of American babies. It will also explore how our expectations of babies have changed over the past century.
"This will be the first book to analyze the dramatic transformations in the lives of babies resulting from ongoing changes in American life in the domains of medicine, the marketplace, politics, demography, family life and popular culture," Golden says.
Golden's extensive research will draw upon more than 800 baby books in which parents of all social classes have detailed the lives of their infants. She describes those books as "unexplored and significant" sources.
Her research will also include family papers, diaries, letters, transcribed oral histories, folklore accounts, and studying representations of babies in print, on television and film, and on Web sites.