American Decades
Lynd, Robert S. and Lynd, Helen Merrell 1892-1970, 1896-1982
SOCIOLOGISTS
Pioneer Sociologists.
With their two groundbreaking studies of American life, Middletown (1929) and Middle-town in Transition (1937), Robert S. and Helen Merrell Lynd helped found the field of modern sociology. Their research made available for the first time an in-depth account of how average Americans lived their daily lives during the 1920s.
Background.
Robert Staughton Lynd was born in New Albany, Indiana, and raised in Louisville, Kentucky. He graduated from Princeton in 1914 and for four years served as the managing editor of Publishers' Weekly. Following a year of service in World War I, Lynd worked briefly for Charles Scribner's Sons and The Freeman Magazine before entering Union Theological Seminary. Helen Merrell was born in La Grange, Illinois, and attended Wellesley College, from which she graduated Phi Beta Kappa in 1919. For two years she taught in girls'...
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1920's Lifestyles and Social Trends
- Overview
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Topics in the News
- The Affair With the Automobile
- The African American Experience
- Backlash
- The Birth Control Movement
- Boosterism
- Fads and Crazes
- Freudianism
- The Impact of Technology on Daily Life
- Masculinity and the Experience of Men
- The Noble Experiment
- Scientific Child Rearing
- Women Get the Vote
- Women Go to Work
- Youth Culture
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Lifestyles and Social Trends, 1920–1929
