The prime of life : a history of modern adulthood / Steven Mintz.
By: Mintz, Steven.
Publisher: Cambridge, Massachusetts : The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2015Description: xvi, 409 pages ; 25 cm.Content type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9780674047679.Subject(s): Adulthood -- United States -- History | Adulthood -- Social aspects -- United States -- History | Life change events -- United States -- History | Life cycle, Human -- Social aspects -- United States -- History | United States -- Social conditionsGenre/Form: Print books.Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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On Shelf | HQ799.95 .M56 2015 (Browse shelf) | Available | AU0000000007699 |
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HQ799.7 .H485 2021 The end of adolescence : the lost art of delaying adulthood / | HQ799.9.I58 G37 2013 The app generation : how today's youth navigate identity, intimacy, and imagination in a digital world / | HQ799.9.I58 J36 2014 Disconnected : youth, new media, and the ethics gap / | HQ799.95 .M56 2015 The prime of life : a history of modern adulthood / | HQ880.4.U6 T73 2016 All the single ladies : unmarried women and the rise of an independent nation / | HQ1060 .A57 2016 Aging | HQ1061 .G717 2015 Lighter as we go : virtues, character strengths, and aging / |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Prologue: The voyage of life -- The tangled transition to adulthood -- Achieving intimacy -- I do : the evolution of marriage -- I don't : alternatives to marriage -- The trials of parenthood -- Finding fulfillment in work -- The angst of adulthood -- Epilogue: Reclaiming adulthood.
"The first history of American adulthood, The Prime of Life examines how succeeding generations of Americans dealt with the primary tasks of adulthood: Navigating the passage from youth to maturity, achieving intimacy and connection, raising the next generation, experiencing work's pleasures and pains, and wresting meaning from life's losses and stresses. Highly attentive to class, ethnicity, gender, and race, this book draws upon a wealth of private letters and other previously untapped sources to challenge a host of misconceptions that distort public thinking today. These include the myths that the transition to adulthood was smoother and more seamless in the past and that adulthood was more stable and predictable than it has since become. But this book does something more. It underscores women's historical role in driving fundamental changes in attitudes toward love, friendship, marriage, childrearing, and work. It demonstrates the ways that social class has differentiated adult experience. It also reconstructs the emotional interior of a life stage too often treated as fit only for self-help books or novels dealing with the travails of the suburban middle class. It not only recaptures adulthood's joys and disappointments, its hopes and frustrated expectations, its soaring dreams and bitter regrets, it demonstrates that development across the life span is shaped less by psychology than by cultural and historical circumstances"--Provided by publisher.