If not crime, what are they fearful and paranoid about?
Jehovah's Witnesses.
If not crime, what are they fearful and paranoid about?
I wouldn't count on that. With the 'stand your ground' law in Florida everyone's so trigger happy even the white man ain't safe.Being white, I probably wouldn't even get shot.
Sure. I was born before the '50s..but I'm staying out of this discussion. Some seem to have their own unbending perceptions(as always)...and that's all I have to say about that.
HD
Actually, I was thinking more about people who "came of age" in the 50's and remember the decade from a (young) adult social perspective. Basically having been born no later than about 1943. That would mean anyone under 70 is too young!
I had a pair of Fanner 50s!
There was a Gay Nineties revival in the early fifties too but it didn't last long.
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The women in the adventure shows were probably closer to Alice Kramden, but were in kid-adventure shows, not comedy. The problem is that no one remembers the adventure shows as representative since they were made just for kids. (Although I still like them today.)
I could get my mother to register here, but if people think I'm mouthy, they'd lie down on the floor and cry after meeting her.
What strikes me most vividly about them is that the most positive role models for women were in shows that the little girls and women (then and now) probably did not or do not watch. These were the action/adventure/Western/science-fiction series of the fifties.
She's a character of the 1940's extended into the 1950's, and not someone who fits into the well-packaged image of "The Fifties."
It's often seemed to me that in the great flattening of society after WWII many pretty average Americans took on what had been affectations of the rich. Before the war a huge number of women were direct partners with their husbands, growing "kitchen crops" while the husband raise the cash crop, working in the family store, that sort of thing. After the war the sort of decorative (at best domestically managerial) "house wife" became more common but I suspect that a lot of them took on baggage that had mostly belonged to the pre war wealthy. "How does it look? What will we say? What will people think?"
Class insecurity was very common among the first generation of suburbanites. In most cases they were the children of working-class families -- the working class, meaning people from blue-collar backgrounds, was the majority in the United States until about 1956 -- and they really didn't know how they were expected to act in such an environment, hence the soaring popularity of various self-help, social-development, and etiquette manuals in the immediate postwar years. The Boys From Marketing took full advantage of this by selling a huge range of products thru an appeal to class insecurity -- sit down with a year's worth of any popular magazine from the 1950s and it'll leap out of the page at you. They weren't selling to the pre-war middle class -- which was defined as families employing at least one servant -- they were selling to Joe and Suzie Dinnerpail from Flatbush, who'd moved out to Levittown and were determined to Fit In.
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That's why so much advertising from "The Fifties" is full of chipper smiling housewives and pipe-clenching husbands with crew cuts -- exactly the types of images that form the focus of all those Time Warp Wives With Beehives sorts of shows and articles. The Boys knew very well that Joe and Suzie weren't really like that, but if they could convince them that's how they *should* be, well, they could sell them just about any damn thing out there. Modern people who assume this is what "The Fifties" were definitively like are like people who think a picture postcard is equivalent to visiting the real place.
That's why so much advertising from "The Fifties" is full of chipper smiling housewives and pipe-clenching husbands with crew cuts -- exactly the types of images that form the focus of all those Time Warp Wives With Beehives sorts of shows and articles.