Delinquent Daughters explores the gender, class, and racial
tensions that fueled campaigns to control female sexuality in late
nineteenth- and early twentieth-century America. Mary Odem looks at
these moral reform movements from a national perspective, but she
also undertakes a detailed analysis of court records to explore the
local enforcement of regulatory legislation in Alameda and Los
Angeles Counties in California. From these legal proceedings emerge
overlapping and often contradictory views of middle-class female
reformers, court and law enforcement officials, working-class
teenage girls, and working-class parents. Odem traces two distinct
stages of moral reform. The first began in 1885 with the movement
to raise the age of consent in statutory rape laws as a means of
protecting young women from predatory men. By the turn of the
century, however, reformers had come to view sexually active women
not as victims but as delinquents, and they called for special
police, juvenile courts, and reformatories to control wayward
girls. Rejecting a simple hierarchical model of class control, Odem
reveals a complex network of struggles and negotiations among
reformers, officials, teenage girls and their families. She also
addresses the paradoxical consequences of reform by demonstrating
that the protective measures advocated by middle-class women often
resulted in coercive and discriminatory policies toward
working-class girls.