As life spans expanded dramatically in the United States after 1900, and employers increasingly demanded the speed and stamina of youth in the workplace, men struggled to sustain identities as workers, breadwinners, and patriarchs—the core ideals of twentieth-century masculinity. Longer life threatened manhood as men confronted age discrimination at work, mandatory retirement, and fixed incomes as recipients of Social Security and workplace pensions. They struggled to somehow sustain manliness in retirement, a new phase of life supposedly defined by the absence of labor. Ironically, retiring men pursued ways to stay “productive”: retirees created new daily routines of golf and shuffleboard games, tinkered with tools in garages, attended social club meetings, armed themselves for hunting and fishing excursions, and threw themselves into yard work. Others looked for new jobs or business ventures. Only unending activity could help to ensure that the “golden years” would be good years for older men of the twentieth century.
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This book explores how aging men struggled to sustain identities as workers, breadwinners, and patriarchs—the core ideals of twentieth-century masculinity—in the midst of increasing employer demands for the speed and stamina of youth in workplaces and the expansion of mandatory retirement policies in the age of Social Security.
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List of Tables AcknowledgmentsIntroductionManhood and Its DiscontentsChapter 1 - Growing Old at Work during the Early Twentieth Century Chapter 2 - Old Age Poverty, Pension Politics, and Gender during the 1920s Chapter 3 - Older Men and the Boundaries of Manhood during the 1930s Chapter 4 - Postwar Manhood and the Shock of Retirement Chapter 5 - Work, Play, and Gender: The Making of Retirement CultureBeyond the Masculinity of Youth?Bibliography
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Retiring Men explores the history of men, manhood and growing old in a rapidly changing industrial society. Wood illustrates how male gender anxieties helped shape government retirement programs and helped forge a post-war retirement culture around the concept of productive manhood. This is a much-needed and important study that effectively uses gender analysis to expand our understanding of ageing and retirement in the twentieth century. —Elizabeth Fones-Wolf, professor of history, West Virginia University
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780761856795
Publisert
2012-01-18
Utgiver
Vendor
University Press Of America
Vekt
576 gr
Høyde
240 mm
Bredde
165 mm
Dybde
23 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
274

Forfatter

Biographical note

Gregory Wood is assistant professor of history at Frostburg State University. His articles and reviews have appeared in Journal of Social History, Labor: Studies in Working-Class History of the Americas, Labor History, Pennsylvania History, Essays in Economic & Business History, Michigan Historical Review, Labour History (Australia), and The Jim Crow Encyclopedia.