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From Vichy to the Sexual Revolution
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Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction: The 1940s? From War to Peace

Chapter 1: Men, Women, and Family Life, 1945-1949
Chapter 2: Forces of Change
Chapter 3: Marriage and Parenting in the 1950s
Chapter 4: Children and Adolescents in the 1950s
Chapter 5: Family, Sex, Marriage, and the New Self
Chapter 6: Youth, Women, Jeunes Filles
Chapter 7: Dating and Courtship
Chapter 8: Something Old, Something New: Marriage and Children in the 1960s

Bibliography

About the Author

Sarah Fishman is Professor of History at the University of Houston. Her books include The Battle for Children: World War II, Youth Crime and Juvenile Justice in Twentieth-Century France and We Will Wait: Wives of French Prisoners of War, 1940-1945.

Reviews

"Fishman offers her trademark clarity and scholarly rigour as she roams beyond elite discourses, though these too are important to her study, in an attempt to get closer to the everyday thoughts, feelings and actions of men and women around France ... Fishman's interleaving of these disparate sources over time is skilful and persuasive. She powerfully evokes the everyday negotiations of power and will in family relationships for middle- and working-class men
and women, boys and girls. She is good at historicizing the post-war shifts" -- Joan Tumblety, History
"Fishman's engaging study is a welcome addition to the growing literature on gender and sexuality in twentieth-century France." -- Camille Robcis, Journal of Modern History
"Fishman makes important contributions to the dynamic historiography of the aftermaths of the Second World War in European societies....[A] clear, convincing account of post-war France which engages with a number of important discussions in modern European history. The originality of sources, the attention to the language deployed in the documents analysed and the focus on children within developing gender relations is especially valuable. Throughout the book,
Fishman introduces elements of transnationalism and comparison with other European countries and with the US which will no doubt be of interest to all historians and students of gender, sexuality and
childhood in the modern period."--Charlotte Faucher, Reviews in History
"Fishman brilliantly shows how women, men, and children contended with the disconcerting challenges of thepostwar period, especially the changing expectations, moral codes, responsibilities, and permissions around gender and family life....Fishman's lively and unusual material, her keen eye for telling details about working-class life, and sharp formulations testify to the interest and significance of the decades that came before."--Judith G. Coffin,
H-France
"[D]raw[s] a remarkably fresh picture of postwar gender and family life..."--Tony Barber, Financial Times Summer Books 2017
"[W]omen in postwar France were no Brigitte Bardots. Their stories are important, and Sarah Fishman evokes and analyzes them in her original, lucid, and important study of gender and the family in modern France."--John Merriman, Los Angeles Review of Books
"Any clichés we have about French womanhood in the postwar era will be forever altered by Sarah Fishman's far-reaching social history, From Vichy to the Sexual Revolution: Gender and Family Life in Postwar France. An unsung hero emerges in her pages: Marcelle Ségal, who ran the advice column of Elle magazine for forty decades, and was arguably as important a force in the emancipation of French women as Simone de Beauvoir. Fishman asks new
questions of original archival sources and allows us to look with fresh eyes at gender stereotypes constructed by New Wave films and popular fiction."--Alice Kaplan, John M Musser Professor of French, Yale University
"Sarah Fishman's history of 'how and why ideas about gender and family life changed after the war' is a masterful history by a distinguished historian at the top of her game. By using novel sources such as magazine advice columns and juvenile court records, Fishman penetrates deep into French class structure to tell the story of how ordinary families fare in a time of great transition. At the same time, she brilliantly shows how Sigmund Freud, Simone de
Beauvoir, and Alfred Kinsey served as cultural touchpoints of the 1950s. Together these three gave rise to a new focus on the self and its actualization which would come to full fruition in the late sixties.
From Vichy to the Sexual Revolution is a fresh, pivotal look at an understudied period which deserves a wide audience among historians of Europe and gender. Brava!"--Mary Louise Roberts, Distinguished Lucie Aubrac Professor of History, University of Wisconsin, Madison
"Sarah Fishman's book addresses a fascinating and important topic, namely, gender and family life in the still under-researched years stretching from the Liberation to the sexual revolution of the late 1960s. She correctly sees these years as a crucial period of transition, not only for young women but for the organization of relationships in French families more broadly. From Vichy to the Sexual Revolution makes excellent use of the abundant and
ethnographically rich material that postwar social policy toward vulnerable families generated, such as juvenile court records and social workers' reports on family visits. This is a sophisticated and engaging book
on a subject whose importance leaps off the pages."--Laura Lee Downs, Professor of Gender History, European University Institute

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