ABSTRACT

Infant Care and Motherhood in an Urban Community investigates the behavior and attitudes of 709 mothers towards their year-old babies. John and Elizabeth Newson, impatient with the voluminous and contradictory literature telling parents how their children should be brought up, decided to find out how they were being brought up. Infant Care in an Urban Community is focused on sources of advice that influence parents, how they feel about their children, and how they react to situations in handling young babies.

Infant handling today is still a subject on which many different specialists use the full weight of their professional authority to back up their private prejudices concerning what is good and what is bad in the care of young children. In the face of the conflict which results, intelligent parents are rapidly forced to the conclusion that the experts know little more about the matter than they do themselves. The truth is that in the present state of knowledge there is not a sufficient body of well-substantiated evidence about the facts and consequences of child rearing on which to base sound practical advice to parents. This is where this book comes in. It shows that much of the advice offered is often out of touch with the practical needs, circumstances, and beliefs of the ordinary mother.

Few theories of child rearing have been subjected to the inconvenience of being reconciled with the empirical evidence. This is the first study which has obtained information of this sort from a large and representative sample of mothers, and which has investigated the behavior of both mother and baby aehere and now' rather than relying on fond maternal memories. A special feature is the use of tape-recorded interviews which has allowed extensive quotation of their mothers' own opinions.

part |2 pages

Part I BACKGROUND OF THE INVESTIGATION AIMS AND DESIGN

chapter |2 pages

It at that

chapter 2|3 pages

THE EVALUATION OF EVIDENCE

chapter 3|3 pages

Birth in prospect and retrospect

chapter |1 pages

of a baby seems to provide

chapter |3 pages

to give

chapter |2 pages

thrill-it

chapter |1 pages

there-I wouldn't have a without

chapter |2 pages

It looked

chapter |4 pages

what -I

chapter |1 pages

' I t

chapter |1 pages

if you

chapter 5|5 pages

EATING AND SLEEPING

chapter |3 pages

'I just give her something else.'

chapter |6 pages

of boredom. 'Goodness' in a very

chapter |2 pages

nervous-I mean, if you leave them

chapter 6|3 pages

THE ROOTS OF SOCIALIZATION

chapter |10 pages

If he cried a lot younger I'd see to

'No-1 don't-not once they get to this age-1 don't think it

chapter |4 pages

of them felt guilty whatever they

chapter |4 pages

of the one-

chapter |2 pages

if she loses her temper

chapter |3 pages

at the sight of their

chapter 7|2 pages

HABIT MAKING AND HABIT BREAKING

chapter |8 pages

of the child

chapter |6 pages

of her

chapter 8|5 pages

Father's place is in the home

chapter |1 pages

if or in an emer-

if I ask him, he won't. It isn't his place to change a

chapter |6 pages

Oh-you

chapter |1 pages

'I could go out

chapter |4 pages

Part

INFANT REARING AND SOCIAL CLASS THE CLASS FACTOR It seems to be fashionable among some contemporary political

chapter 10|3 pages

CHILDBIRTH AND SOCIAL CLASS

chapter |6 pages

of mothers

chapter |1 pages

of the

chapter |2 pages

of this

chapter 13|2 pages

Aggression and counter-aggression

chapter 14|1 pages

MOTHERS, FATHERS AND SOCIAL CLASS

chapter |1 pages

F 203

chapter |6 pages

of the

chapter |4 pages

Part THE LONGER VIEW THEN AND NOW

chapter |2 pages

'I try to give these what I didn't have, you see-not just for if I can afford it.'

It was a harder way of being brought up-mind you, in

chapter |5 pages

of life.

chapter |3 pages

It does not seem over-optimistic to.hope

know-I've ·always had to ... me-

chapter |1 pages

of their parents, these days. I don't

chapter |7 pages

of educational

chapter 1|8 pages

The interview schedule

chapter |4 pages

'-in

chapter |13 pages

xz= ·56, d. of f. 8,