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Political Attitudes over the Life Span: The Bennington Women after Fifty Years
University of Wisconsin Press, 1992 Paper: 978-0-299-13014-5 Library of Congress Classification HM291.A4895 1992 Dewey Decimal Classification 306.2
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ABOUT THIS BOOK
The culmination of one of the most famous long-term studies in American sociology, this examination of political attitudes among women who attended Bennington College in the 1930s and 1940s now spans five decades, from late adolescence to old age. Theodore Newcomb’s 1930s interviews at Bennington, where the faculty held progressive views that contrasted with those of the conservative families of the students, showed that political orientations are still quite malleable in early adulthood. The studies in 1959-60 and 1984 show the persistence of political attitudes over the adult life span: the Bennington women, raised in conservative homes, were liberalized in their college years and have remained politically involved and liberal in their views, even in their sixties and seventies. See other books on: Alumni and alumnae | Attitude change | College graduates | Longitudinal studies | Women in politics See other titles from University of Wisconsin Press |
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