|     Leontine 
              Young was considered one of the country’s foremost authorities 
              on unmarried mothers in the early postwar era. She contends here 
              that non-marital pregnancy expressed deep neuroses and required 
              sophisticated psychological interpretation and adjustment. Illegitimacy, 
              Young believed, was the result of emotional conflicts rooted in 
              predictable, negative patterns of childhood development and family 
              life. The study on which this conclusion was based deliberately 
              excluded “girls coming from a cultural background where illegitimacy 
              is more or less socially acceptable.” This was an indirect 
              reference to African-Americans and other minority communities whose 
              supposed toleration of nonmarital pregnancy frequently justified 
              racial discrimination in the delivery of adoption services. The 
              perception that illegitimacy 
              was most problematic among white Americans was widely shared, by 
              professionals and laypeople alike, at a time when Freudianism—and 
              therapeutic culture generally—had reached its zenith in the 
              United States.  
            The psychology of the unmarried mother—what she is like and 
              why she becomes an unmarried mother—is an infinitely complex 
              question. Its roots are deeply embedded in those powerful emotions 
              of early childhood which form the basic pattern and structure of 
              the individual’s total life. Far more than most, this specific 
              problem represents a direct expression of early fantasies and emotional 
              conflicts. Perhaps this very directly has contributed to confusion 
              about the unmarried mother. Clearly, she is a human being who like 
              all other human beings responds dynamically to her particular life 
              situation, but, also clearly, she chooses one common and specific 
              response, having an out-of-wedlock child. 
            Unless we are to assume that illegitimacy may spring from any haphazard 
              combination of motives and circumstances, there must be certain 
              defined emotional patterns that lead to the creation of this problem. 
              Anyone who has observed a considerable number of unmarried mothers 
              can testify to the fact that there is nothing haphazard or accidental 
              in the causation that brought about this specific situation with 
              these specific girls. On the contrary, there is an inevitability 
              about the chain of emotions climaxing in this action which rivals 
              the old Greek tragedies. . . . 
            This leads logically to the question of what combination of factors 
              and circumstances, what personality pattern underlie this problem. 
              Are there common elements in the backgrounds of these girls? Are 
              there common trends and tendencies in their personality structures 
              despite the individual variations, the unique quality of any single 
              human being? What of particular significance in their family situations 
              or their life histories casts light upon the development and direction 
              of these personality patterns? . . . Obviously, only 
              a careful and detailed study of a large number of cases could gave 
              any final answer to such questions but even a limited survey can 
              elicit the broad outlines, can highlight consistencies and inconsistencies, 
              can define probabilities. 
            For this purpose a random sample of 100 cases from an unmarried 
              mother agency has been studied. . . . It was immediately 
              apparent that almost all the girls had come from two or three general 
              types of family patterns and that this family pattern determined 
              to a very large extent the pattern of her personality and the direction 
              of her life experiences. What were the kinds of family situations 
              in which the early lives of these 100 girls had been molded? 
            Dominating Mothers 
              Thirty-six of them came from homes where the mother was definitely 
              the dominant personality and the father either was a weaker person 
              or was emotionally cut off from the children to a greater or lesser 
              degree. To the girls of this group the father was all too often 
              a stranger, the man who paid the bills but was not allowed, or did 
              not attempt, to share intimately in the lives and feelings of his 
              children. The mother on the other hand, dominated her daughter’s 
              life to an unhealthy degree, was usually possessive and often rejecting 
              and sadistic. While there were 36 variations on this pattern, they 
              were variations of degree not of kind, variations in expression 
              not in essential quality. This family situation had left its indelible 
              mark upon the girl. . . . 
            There is a striking similarity between the girl’s relationship 
              to her own father and her relationship to the father of her baby. 
              One cannot escape the conclusion that she is in one sense seeking 
              her own father and that the father of her baby is truly a kind of 
              biological tool, unimportant to her as a person in his own right. . . . 
             What better revenge could she devise against a rejecting mother 
              than to bear an illegitimate child and place the responsibility 
              for him upon her mother’s shoulders? And in what more complete 
              way could she express her love for and her dependency upon her mother, 
              and assuage her guilt toward her mother, than to give the mother 
              the baby, a tangible evidence of her deep, unconscious tie as well 
              as a symbol of her own desire to be again an infant cared for by 
              the mother? . . . 
            When it was clear that a girl’s mother would not accept the 
              baby, she nearly always planned to place the child for adoption. 
              Nor did she show any great conflict about this decision; the conflict 
              did not lie primarily in this area at all. . . . 
            Dominating Fathers 
              In contrast to the family background of these 36 girls, 15 others 
              came from homes where the father was the dominating personality 
              and the mother was the weaker or less aggressive person. . . . 
            When one considers the nature of their relationship to their own 
              fathers, it is scarcely surprising to discover that their experiences 
              with the fathers of their babies were not happy. None of them knew 
              the man well or had known him for any considerable period of time. . . . 
              Observing them one got the impression that they were trying unconsciously 
              either to deny their own fathers by picking a virtual stranger or 
              to re-experience with a lover much the same kind of masochistic 
              relationship they had had with their fathers. . . . 
             These girls had a more difficult time coming to a decision about 
              the baby than those in the first group. . . . They 
              did not show the strong need. . .to give their babies 
              to their mothers. . . . Of these 15 girls, 11 placed 
              their babies for adoption. . . . 
            Broken Homes 
              Not surprisingly, the largest group of girls, 43, came from broken 
              homes. . . . Closer study of the individual situations 
              reveals that in 22 of the cases the father was gone, either through 
              death, separation, or divorce, and the mother had become the dominant 
              influence and authority. Twelve of those mothers had clearly been 
              dominating, sadistic, and openly rejecting, and all of them had 
              been to some extent rejecting of their daughters. In 8 cases the 
              mother was gone and the father was the parent taking responsibility 
              for the children. Five of these fathers had been definitely rejecting, 
              had been openly abusive or coldly indifferent, and had taken little 
              responsibility for their daughters as they grew older. None of the 
              8 girls had had a close or happy relationship with their fathers. 
              In 11 cases both parents were gone, and the girl had been brought 
              up by relatives or in foster homes. . . . 
            Some Inferences 
              Certainly there are common elements in the backgrounds of these 
              girls. Most conspicuous is the fact that none of them had happy, 
              healthy relationships with their parents. Whatever the particular 
              family situation, the conflicting feelings of love and hate remained 
              a basic and potent source of unhappiness and trouble. Almost equally 
              noticeable was the dominance of the mother, the strength and the 
              pervasiveness of the role she played in this complex drama. . . . 
              The more dominating, the more sadistic, the more rejecting the mother, 
              the sicker and more hopeless was the girl. . . . 
            All these girls, unhappy and driven by unconscious needs, had blindly 
              sought a way out of their emotional dilemma by having an out-of-wedlock 
              child. . . . None of these violent neurotic conflicts 
              are helpful ingredients in creating a good mother. . . .  |