Jessie
Taft (left) and Virginia Robinson in front of their home in
Flourtown, Pennsylvania in 1954. The two women met at the University
of Chicago in 1908, where they established an intellectual and
emotional bond that lasted for the rest of their lives.
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This brief
excerpt from Jessie Taft's dissertation suggests her enduring theoretical
interest in the social foundations of selfhood and other social
psychological themes that underpinned practical therapeutic approaches
to child adoption, family life, and social problems in general.
Taft earned a Ph.D. from the University of Chicago in 1913, where
she worked under the direction of George Herbert Mead. The dissertation
showcased her proficiency in bringing abstract social theory to
bear on a subject with practical and contemporary import, women’s
collective identity and action. Her basic argument was that movements
of women and industrial workers gave social expression to personal
conflicts rooted in spheres understood (mistakenly) to be private,
natural, and therefore immune from social influence. Her work in
child and family welfare later on was based on very similar thinking
about the family.
PERSONALITY AND THE PRESENT SOCIAL ORDER
Such a survey as we have just made leaves little
doubt as to the reality and seriousness of the chaotic conditions
of which the “uneasy woman” complains. The bare fact
that there exists in society at the present moment a large class
of idle women; a still larger class of women working in homes at
enormous waste of time, energy, and efficiency; a third and comparatively
small class whose work, though satisfactory, is of such a character
as to interfere with marriage if they desire it; and a fourth class
whose work is rendering them unfit for anything else, is sufficient
evidence in itself that women are not realizing themselves through
their social relations in any complete or harmonious way; but rather
are buffeted about at the mercy of these same social relations.
The selves which women bring to bear upon the struggle seem to be
overwhelmed by a situation that is too large for them. They are
controlled by these external conditions instead of realizing themselves
through them.
The case is not different with the modern man.
The woman has no monopoly on conflict and disharmony. He, too, is
swamped by the system in: which he finds himself. He, too, is being
made, willy-nilly, by the relations in which modern business and
industry are involving him; yet he is not expressing himself consciously
through these relations. One has only to recall the struggle between
capital and labor, the way in which life with its ideal interests
is being crowded out by the pressure of the economic machinery not
only on the laborer but on the man who is chained down to money-making,
the frequent incompatibility of home and family with the work for
which the man is fitted by nature, the alienation of the father
from his home responsibilities through lack of leisure, to realize
that the unsatisfactory character of the woman's life is but a conspicuous
part of a wider and more basic situation which involves men as well.
This thesis is based on the contention that the
incompatibilities and oppositions sketched above are genuine and
are the particular expressions of a more basic conflict existing
between the self, the personality, of the modern man and woman,
and the present social situation through which this self has not
yet succeeded in expressing itself because it is not yet sufficiently
conscious of the social character of that situation or of the method
through which control can be secured. The realization, that we have
as yet no social control and few personalities, either masculine
or feminine, sufficiently socialized to cope with the modern world,
is being forced upon us most conspicuously in the terrific conflicts
arising from the indifference of the form taken on by business and
industry to the actual content involved. . . .
The woman can never become a full-fledged, rational
human being, nor can she be held responsible for any of the conditions
in modern life until society ceases to consider it essential to
womanliness that she receive passively the impact of all the currents
of present-day organized existence. As long as woman has no part
in directing the forces which determine the family, herself, the
least detail of her domestic life, society is retaining the lady
of chivalry at the expense of conscious motherhood and is encouraging
the immediate impulsive reactions of the simple situation at the
price of deliberate reflection and social consciousness which alone
are effective under the complex conditions of today. Just as the
great labor movement is trying to bring the laborer to consciousness
of his needs and possibilities, and society to awareness of the
advantage of conscious labor, so the woman movement has before it
a twofold task: first, to make women conscious of their relations
to a social order, second, to show society its need of conscious
womanhood. . . .
A SOCIAL THEORY OF THE SELF AS THE GROUND
OF THE WOMAN MOVEMENT
The clash of home and outer world which so disturbs the feminine
mind today, as well as the struggle of labor and capital, might
be avoided to a large extent by mere change in the external working
conditions, by a lessening of the hours of labor, by a minimum wage,
by improved housing and sanitation, by a scientific cooperative
housekeeping. But in the last analysis, the basic conflict on whose
solution even the improvement of external conditions depends, the
conflict between the narrow self and the wide social environment,
can be adjusted only on the supposition that personality or selfhood
is made, not born, and that a less conscious form of personality
may evolve into a more conscious form under conditions which are
neither mysterious nor absolute but can be understood and made use
of. The criticisms and analyses of the modern woman which we have
examined all point to a personality inadequate to the life into
which social and economic changes have plunged her. If the crux
of the matter lies here, the fundamental purpose of the woman movement
must be to correct this state of affairs by helping to bring into
being a more conscious womanhood and by arousing society to an awareness
of its need for such a womanhood. To believe that this is possible
is to imply certain things about the nature of selves, personality,
or self-consciousness (the terms are used interchangeably in this
discussion). If we conceive of the self as something which is given,
static, present from the beginning both in the individual and the
race, or, what is practically the same thing, as something which
develops absolutely, reaching its full growth regardless of any
known conditions, then we have put the self outside of our own world,
have made it mysterious and unknowable, and by so doing have given
up the hope of social reconstruction, for there is no reconstruction
of society without a reconstruction of selves. We can get no hold
on a self that is static nor on one that develops absolutely. If
social problems are ever to be solved like other problems in our
world, selves must be thought of as existing in grades and degrees,
evolving gradually in the individual and in the race, with certain
definite conditions of growth which can be discovered and used.
When we understand how consciousness develops into more and more
adequate forms, then we have turned our once mysterious and unknown
phenomenon into yielding, pliable material for a genuine social
science. Control of physical objects was impossible as long as physical
facts were accepted as fixed, mysterious, or absolute. Just so,
social control is impossible as long as the self remains an unknown
quantity. . . .
The discovery of the social character of even the intellectual
processes and the relation of these processes to the building up
of a self gives a breadth and comprehensiveness to personality that
it has never before attained in history. At a very early period
it is possible for consciousness to take on the form of a self through
building up the selves around it and playing various parts without
having reached the point where it is capable of subjecting to analysis
the self thus attained. It is also possible for consciousness to
advance to the stage where it can turn in upon itself and dissect
the self in a highly sophisticated way without even then realizing
that it is part of a social process and that its intellectual activities,
however expressed, are just as much a part of the personality and
just as social as the feelings or the will. The final step of seeing
the self as a process whose law can be stated and of finding in
the self and in all social relations material that admits of reconstruction
and scientific handling, just as in the case of supposedly nonsocial
objects and relations, marks the highest point of growth in self-consciousness
as yet developed in our experience. . . .
Our age is witnessing the disappearance of the isolated individual
and the growth of an internal control based on the recognition of
the dependence of the individual on social relations and his actual
interest in social goods and in the discovery that thought is social
in origin and can be used to advantage in the social as well as
in the physical world. The freedom that was supposed to reside in
the individual is seen to be realized only through society. The
individual is not economically or morally free except when he is
able to express himself, to realize his ends through the common
life. As an individual, he is powerless to determine his own actions
beyond a certain point. He must think with society and make his
thought effective through social media or he has no control. Moreover,
the hypotheses which he offers as solutions to social problems must
include as part of the data to be considered the impulses and interests,
the point of view, of all classes of people, if they are to be successful.
In other words, not only is thought social in origin, but it keeps
a social content and character. The individual must think as a social
being, must take over the points of view of all his social “others”
if his thinking is to be true in a social order, that is, the value
of his thought in handling social questions is tested just as it
is in handling physical problems, by the adequacy with which it
covers all the data involved. Hypotheses which ignore the interests
of entire classes of people, which fail to recognize existing social
relations, will not work in the long run.
The hard and unyielding individual with his boundless, empty freedom
is compensated for the loss of his abstract rights by the discovery
that concrete freedom, an actual realizing of his own powers, is
possible through a social order and through a selfhood that grows
in an intelligible way and is, therefore, subject to reconstruction
by the same methods that are continually changing the physical world
in accordance with human desires. |