|
|
|
Home Slackers: Men, the State,
and Welfare in Modern America
Michael Willrich
|
As the United States stood at the threshold
of the twentieth century, heightened public concerns about "home slacker"
husbands, wage earners who failed to support their families, gave rise
to new forms of social regulation that have left a lasting imprint on
welfare policy. The new, court-centered regime of male breadwinner regulation
emerged at a moment when the facts of modern social lifewage labor,
urban living, ethnic and racial diversity, and a population in perpetual
motionseemed dangerously corrosive to traditional family bonds.
Those bonds were, in the first instance, legal, an interlocking
chain of rights and duties that governed the domestic relations of husband
and wife, parent and child. As social experts and moral authorities
warned that families were "breaking down" at an alarming rate, private
charity officials, women reformers, state lawmakers, and judges invented
a new system of regulation to reinforce what they saw as the chain's
weakest link: workingmen who shirked their "natural and legal duty"
to support their families, shifting that burden to the public.1 |
1 |
|
"Delinquent husbands."
"Shiftless and lazy drunks." "Married vagabonds." "Worthless men." "Home
slackers." Epithets of the era, as often hurled by a judge from the
bench as by a minister from a pulpit, recall a proliferation of cultural
representations of unwilling or failed breadwinners as common criminals,
unfit citizens, and half-men. Between 1890 and 1915, every state in
the union enacted new laws that made a husband's desertion or failure
to support his wife or children a crime, punishable in many locales
by imprisonment at hard labor. To administer the statutes more effectively,
cities across the nation during the 1910s and early 1920s rolled out
a new piece of judicial machinery, the "socialized" family court. Part
criminal court, part "social agency," these novel tribunals teemed with
psychiatrists, social workers, and probation officers, in addition to
the usual cast of judges, bailiffs, and prosecutors. The courts' chief
purpose was to compel the delinquent husband to fulfill his manly dutiesto
"keep sober, work and support his family," as a typical probation order
put itthus keeping his family intact and, not incidentally, off
the welfare rolls. "The chief value of a good law, well enforced," the
New York charity worker Lilian Brandt observed in 1905, "is that it
expresses the estimation in which society holds men who shirk their
obligations to their families, and that it relieves society of the necessity
of assuming their responsibilities."2 |
2 |
|
This essay recovers
the largely forgotten history of breadwinner regulation during the Progressive
Era (18901919). By deliberately moving wage-earning men to the
foreground, it builds upon, challenges, and aims to broaden the rich
new feminist literature on gender and welfare state formation in Europe
and the United States. Feminist scholars have firmly established the
historical significance of welfare as a "women's issue." But they have
paid too little attention to the role of meneither as makers and
implementers of policy or as subjects of welfare discourse and intervention.
This leaves us with an incomplete understanding of welfare's gendered
past. I argue that a court-centered regime for policing delinquent wage-earning
husbands emerged alongside the better-known American welfare innovations
of the early twentieth century: state-administered workmen's compensation
systems and state-funded "pensions" to mother-headed households. No
less than these other gendered policy "tracks," breadwinner regulation
was vital to the ideological and political development of modern welfare
governance in its formative era.3 |
. . . |
There are about 15346 more words in this article.
Please log in (or, if you are not yet an
authorized user, please go to the
User Setup page) to gain full access rights. Or if you're already logged in register your subscription.
|