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The Unadjusted Girl, With Cases and Standpoint for Behavior Analysis: INDEX

The Unadjusted Girl, With Cases and Standpoint for Behavior Analysis
INDEX
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table of contents
  1. Front Matter
    1. Foreword
    2. Contents
  2. Chapter I. The Wishes
    1. 1. The Desire for New Experience
    2. 2. The Desire for Security
    3. 3. The Desire for Response
    4. 4. The Desire for Recognition
  3. Chapter II. The Regulation of the Wishes
  4. Chapter III. The Individualization of Behavior
  5. Chapter IV. The Demoralization of Girls
  6. Chapter V. Social Agencies
  7. Chapter VI. The Measurement of Social Influence
  8. Back Matter
    1. Index
    2. Transcriber’s Notes
    3. The Full Project Gutenberg License

INDEX

  • Abbott, Edith, 102, 211.
  • Abnormality, problem of, 255.
  • Addams, Jane, 31.
  • Additon, Henrietta, 212.
  • Alcoholism, problem of, 255.
  • Anger, emotion of, 2.
  • Attitudes, mental, 233.
  • Bedford Hills Reformatory, 172.
  • Behavior, a science of, 228.
  • Bentley, Mary Ide, 86.
  • Bohemian, 12.
  • Breckenridge, S. P., 102, 211.
  • Cabot, Hugh, 92.
  • Cadet, the, 141.
  • Character, definition of, 241.
  • Charity girl, 119.
  • Chicago Vice Commission, 229.
  • Church, Irish Catholic, 159;
    • Polish Catholic, 159.
  • Code, the social, 50.
  • Common sense vs. scientific procedure, 225.
  • Community, 43.
  • Crime, problem of, 255.
  • Crime and punishment, 223.
  • Criminology, procedure of, 222.
  • Culbert, Jane F., 216.
  • Cultures, problem of, 255.
  • Davis, Katherine B., 116, 117, 118.
  • Daydreaming, 35.
  • Deardorff, Neva R., 212.
  • Delinquency, beginning of, 109.
  • Delinquent, proportion of foreign born, 152.
  • Demi-virgin, 231.
  • Demoralization of girls, 98, 150.
  • Dostoievsky, F., 10.
  • Economic Determination, 118.
  • Economic interests, overdetermination of, 256.
  • Economic problem, 256.
  • Eliot, Thomas D., 211.
  • Ellis, Havelock, 100.
  • El Retiro, 200.
  • Emotions, 2.
  • Engelgardt, A. N., 45.
  • Epithets, 49.
  • Experience, desire for new, 4.
  • Exploitation of girl by parents, 108.
  • Family, 43.
  • Fear, emotion of, 2.
  • Feeble-mindedness, 251.
  • Flapper, 231.
  • Flynn, Wm. J., 240.
  • Flynt, Josiah, 7.
  • Folkways, 44.
  • Gang, Influence on Girl, 142.
  • Girls’ Protective Bureau, 160.
  • Gossip, 49.
  • Group and individual, 70.
  • Hapgood, Hutchins, 21, 24.
  • Healy, William, 35.
  • Home, the demoralized, 209.
  • Hunting psychosis, 9.
  • Idealization of Girls, 125.
  • Individual and group, 70.
  • Individual and society, struggle between, 233.
  • Individualization, 70, 97, 255.
  • Influence, sources of, 249.
  • Immigrant, 39.
  • Instincts, 2.
  • Institutions and the family, 151.
  • Interest, hunting pattern of, 9.
  • Italians and white slavery, 145.
  • James, William, 22.
  • Jennings, H. S., 3, 217.
  • Jews and white slavery, 145.
  • Joy, emotion of, 3.
  • Juvenile Courts, establishment of, 194.
  • Kammerer, P. G., 132, 141.
  • Kneeland, George J., 144.
  • Krauss, F. S., 49.
  • Labor, Restoration of Stimulation to, 256.
  • Lashley, K. S., 80.
  • Legal system, 80.
  • Leibnitz, 219.
  • Love, emotion of, 2.
  • Lying, pathological, 35.
  • McAdoo, William, 11.
  • Marriage of illegal mothers, 141.
  • Mental attitudes, 233.
  • Meyer, A., 3.
  • Mir, 45.
  • Morris, Wm., 257.
  • Motherhood, illegal, 140.
  • Motion picture, 79, 83.
  • Nationalities, Problem of, 255.
  • Newspaper, 83.
  • Niceforo, A., 99.
  • Nightingale, Florence, 31.
  • Normal and abnormal, studies of, 231.
  • Occupations, Devoid of Stimulation, 256.
  • Ostwald, on great men, 219.
  • Pasteur, L., 10, 31, 32.
  • Penitentiary, 171.
  • Philistine, 12.
  • Pimp, the, 141.
  • Poverty and demoralization, 98.
  • Pratt, Anna B., 218.
  • Prostitute, schooling of, 116;
    • economic status of parents, 116;
    • wages of, 117;
    • the occasional, 119.
  • Prostitution, causes of, 117, 125;
    • problem of, 255.
  • Psychoanalysis as method, 253.
  • Punishment and crime, 223.
  • Rage, Emotion of, 2.
  • Recognition, desire for, 31.
  • Reflex, conditioned, 49.
  • Reform of child in spite of institution, 223.
  • Reformatory, 171.
  • Response, desire for, 17.
  • Reuter, E. B., 130.
  • Reynolds, James Bronson, 223.
  • Richards, Caroline C., 68.
  • Saleilles, R., 7.
  • Schematization of life, 225.
  • School, as substitute for juvenile court, 211.
  • School and community, 214.
  • School, measure of influence, 217;
    • as injurious to personality, 219.
  • Science, method of, 225;
    • as an end in itself, 227.
  • Security, desire for, 12.
  • Seduction of girls, 125.
  • Servant girls, 118.
  • Sexes, problem of the, 255.
  • Sexual desire as cause of demoralization, 109, 126.
  • Shop-girl, 119.
  • Situation, definition of, 42.
  • Smith, Edith L., 92, 125, 134, 136, 140.
  • Social agencies, 151.
  • Social change, rate of, 70, 78.
  • Social evolution, rate of, 230.
  • Social influence, measurement of, 222.
  • Social science, backwardness of, 229.
  • Social unrest, 72.
  • Social values, 232, 233.
  • Souteneur, the, 141.
  • Spiridonova, Maria, 31.
  • Statistics, as method, 244.
  • Sublimation of the wish, 243.
  • Success, two types of, 219.
  • Taft, Jessie, 34, 36, 200, 209, 221.
  • Temperament, 241.
  • Thomas, W. I., 3.
  • Thompson, Sir Wm., 219.
  • Thorndike, E. L., 17, 26.
  • Todd, Helen M., 218.
  • Train, A., 81.
  • True, Ruth, 13.
  • Unrest in Immigrants, 72.
  • Vagabondage, 6, 255.
  • Values, social, 232.
  • Van Waters, Miriam, 84, 195, 224.
  • Veblen, Thorstein, 31.
  • Venereal infections, 79.
  • Vice Commission of Chicago, 229.
  • Visiting teacher, 214.
  • Watson, J. B., 3, 9, 17, 80, 248.
  • Watson, Rosalie R., 248.
  • Webb, Sidney and Beatrice, 99.
  • White slavers, methods of, 145.
  • White slavery, 141, 150.
  • Wishes, 1;
    • fixation of, 18;
    • over determination of, 18;
    • organization of, 39;
    • regulation of, 41;
    • transfer of, 243.
  • Women, types of, 230.
  • Wulffen, E., 236, 241.
  • Yerkes, Charles M., 252.
  • Zlatovratsky, N. N., 46.

1. John B. Watson: “Practical and Theoretic Problems in Instinct and Habits”, in “Suggestions of Modern Science Concerning Education”, by H. S. Jennings, J. B. Watson, Adolf Meyer, W. I. Thomas, p. 63.

2. Records of the Juvenile Court of Cook County (Illinois).

3. Josiah Flynt: “How Men Become Tramps”, Century Magazine, Vol. 50, p. 944 (October, 1895).

4. R. Saleilles: “The Individualization of Punishment”, p. 283.

5. Letter from “Railroad Jack” (Manuscript).

6. Records of the Girls’ Protective Bureau (Manuscript).

7. F. Dostoievsky: “The House of the Dead”, p. 25.

8. “Primary-Group Norms in Present-Day Society”, in “Suggestions of Modern Science Concerning Education”, p. 162.

9. Chief City Magistrate William McAdoo, in New York World, December 18, 1920.

10. Ruth True: “The Neglected Girl”, p. 50.

11. W. I. Thomas and Florian Znaniecki: “The Polish Peasant in Europe and America”, in “Life Record of an Immigrant”, Vol. 3, pp. 246 and 251.

12. From the section entitled “A Bintel Brief” in Forward (a New York newspaper in the Yiddish language), April 12, 1920.

13. E. L. Thorndike: “The Original Nature of Man”, p. 81.

14. Forward, February 8, 1922.

15. Forward, March 8, 1922.

16. “Letters of William James”, p. 218. The Atlantic Monthly Press.

17. Hutchins Hapgood: “The Marionette” (Manuscript).

18. Forward, December 17, 1920.

19. E. L. Thorndike: “The Original Nature of Man”, p. 87.

20. Chicago American, May 13, 1915.

21. Edith L. Smith, in collaboration with Hugh Cabot: “A Study in Sexual Morality”, Social Hygiene, Vol. 2, p. 532.

22. Burr: “Religious Confession and Confessants”, p. 356.

23. “The Lady Bum”, by One of Them. New York Times, Book Review and Magazine, January 1, 1922.

24. Jessie Taft: “Mental Hygiene Problems of Normal Adolescence”, Mental Hygiene, Vol. 5, p. 746.

25. William Healy: “Mental Conflicts and Misconduct”, p. 217.

26. Jessie Taft: “Mental Hygiene Problems of Normal Adolescence”, Mental Hygiene, Vol. 5, p. 750.

27. Forward, September 30, 1921.

28. A. N. Engelgardt: “Iz Derevni: 12 Pisem” (“From the Country; 12 Letters”), p. 315.

29. N. N. Zlatovratsky: “Ocherki Krestyanskoy Obshchiny” (“Sketches of the Peasant Commune”), p. 127.

30. “V Volostnikh Pisaryakh” (“A Village Secretary”), p. 283.

31. F. S. Krauss: “Sitte und Brauch der Südslaven”, p. 103.

32. Forward, March 10, 1920.

33. Forward, January 22, 1921.

34. Forward, January 12, 1922.

35. Forward, July 9, 1920.

36. Forward, February 6, 1914.

37. Forward, November 26, 1920.

38. Caroline C. Richards: “Village Life in America”, pp. 21–138, passim. New York, Henry Holt and Company. Reprinted by permission. Quoted by R. E. Park and E. W. Burgess: “Introduction to the Science of Sociology”, p. 305.

39. Forward, March 11, 1921.

40. Hutchins Hapgood: “At Christine’s” (Manuscript).

41. Forward, December 8, 1920.

42. Newspaper item.

43. Editorial in The New Republic, June 19, 1915.

44. These materials, edited by John B. Watson and K. S. Lashley, have been printed in part in Mental Hygiene, Vol. 4, pp. 769–847.

45. A. Train: “The Prisoner at the Bar”, p. 6.

46. N. Y. World, February 4, 1922.

47. Forward, May 4, 1920.

48. Miriam Van Waters: “The True Value of Correctional Education.” Paper read at the 51st American Prison Conference, November 1, 1921.

49. Editorial in the Brown University Daily Herald, quoted in the New York World, February 3, 1921.

50. Mary Ide Bentley, Address at Berkeley, California. New York Sun, February 7, 1922.

51. New York American, September 27, 1920.

52. Forward, January 1, 1920.

53. Forward, December 15, 1920.

54. Edith L. Smith, in Collaboration with Hugh Cabot: “A Study in Sexual Morality”, Social Hygiene, Vol. 2, p. 537.

55. New York World, May 4, 1920.

56. Autobiography (Manuscript).

57. Résumé from A. Niceforo: “Les Classes Pauvres”, pp. 257–274.

58. Sidney and Beatrice Webb: “The Prevention of Destitution”, p. 306.

59. Havelock Ellis: “Studies in the Psychology of Sex”, Vol. 6. p. 275.

60. Sophonisba P. Breckenridge and Edith Abbott: “The Delinquent Child and the Home”, pp. 74, 105.

61. Records of the Girls’ Protective Bureau.

62. Records of the Girls’ Protective Bureau.

63. Records of the Juvenile Court of Cook County, Illinois.

64. Records of the Juvenile Court of Cook County, Illinois.

65. Case Histories of 21 Women ... at Bedford Hills (Pamphlet) p. 3.

66. From the Records of the Juvenile Court of Cook County.

67. Records of the Juvenile Court of Cook County.

68. Records of the Juvenile Court of Cook County.

69. Records of the Juvenile Court of Cook County.

70. New York American, January 2, 1922.

71. Records of the Juvenile Court of Cook County.

72. Katharine Bement Davis: “A Study of Prostitutes Committed from New York City.” Supplementary chapter in Kneeland’s “Commercialized Prostitution in New York City”, p. 205.

73. Katharine Bement Davis: “A Study of Prostitutes Committed from New York City.” Supplementary chapter in Kneeland’s “Commercialized Prostitution in New York City”, p. 177.

74. Ibid., 221.

75. Katharine Bement Davis. Op. cit. pp. 145, 225.

76. “Histoire de la Prostitution” ... quoted by Ellis in “Studies in the Psychology of Sex”, Vol. 6, p. 261.

77. “The Social Evil in Chicago” (Report of the Vice Commission of Chicago), p. 80.

78. Edith L. Smith: “A Study in Sexual Morality”, “Social Hygiene”, Vol. 2, p. 541.

79. Records of the New York Probation Association.

80. From the manuscript of an autobiography and case study by Professor E. B. Reuter.

81. P. G. Kammerer: “The Unmarried Mother”, p. 148.

82. Edith L. Smith: “A Study in Sexual Morality”, “Social Hygiene”, Vol. 2, p. 535.

83. Edith L. Smith: “A Study in Sexual Morality”, “Social Hygiene”, Vol. 2, p. 540.

84. Edith L. Smith, “A Study in Sexual Morality”, “Social Hygiene”, Vol. 2, p. 538.

85. P. G. Kammerer: “The Unmarried Mother”, p. 302.

86. “Mutterschaft”, p. 459.

87. Forward, November 18, 1913.

88. George J. Kneeland: “Commercialized Prostitution in New York City”, p. 90.

89. New York World, March 5, 1920.

90. Maud Miner: “The Slavery of Prostitution”, p. 105.

91. Forward, June 7, 1906.

92. See Breckenridge and Abbott: “The Delinquent Child and Home”, p. 59.

93. Records of the United Charities of Chicago.

94. Records of the Girls’ Protective Bureau.

95. Records of the Girls’ Protective Bureau.

96. “Where Girls Go Right”, Survey Graphic, June, 1922.

97. Miriam van Waters: “Juvenile Court Procedure as a Factor in Diagnosis”, “Papers and Proceedings of the American Sociological Society”, Vol. 16.

98. Jessie Taft: “Some Problems in Delinquency—Where Do They Belong?” “Papers and Proceedings of the American Sociological Society”, Vol. 16.

99. Jessie Taft: “Some Problems in Delinquency—Where Do They Belong?” “Papers and Proceedings of the American Sociological Society”, Vol. 16.

100. Sophonisba P. Breckenridge and Edith Abbott: “The Delinquent Child and the Home”, p. 102.

101. Thomas D. Eliot: “The Juvenile Court and the Community.”

102. Henrietta Additon and Neva R. Deardorff: “That Child”, The Survey, May 3, 1919.

103. Jane F. Culbert: “The Visiting Teacher”, Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science: Child Welfare, November, 1921, pp. 85, 87, 88.

104. Herbert S. Jennings: “The Biology of Children in Relation to Education”, in “Suggestions of Modern Science Concerning Education”, p. 15.

105. Helen M. Todd: “Why Children Work”, McClure’s Magazine, April, 1913.

106. Anna Beach Pratt: “The Relation of the Teacher and the Social Worker”, Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science: Child Welfare, November, 1921, p. 90.

107. Jessie Taft: “The Neurotic Girl”, Modern Medicine, Vol. 2, p. 162.

108. James Bronson Reynolds: Communication to the New York World, March 6, 1922.

109. Miriam van Waters: “The True Value of Correctional Education.” Paper read at the 51st American Prison Congress, November 1, 1921.

110. Based on E. Wulffen: “Psychologie des Verbrechens”, Vol. 1, p. 173.

111. William J. Flynn, Former Chief of the United States Secret Service: “My Ten Biggest Man Hunts”, New York Herald, January 29, 1922.

112. Based on E. Wulffen: “Psychologie des Verbrechens”, Vol. 2, p. 320.

113. John B. Watson and Rosalie Rayner Watson: “Studies in Infant Psychology”, Popular Science Monthly, December, 1921, pp. 494, 515.

114. “Psychological Examining in the United States Army”. Report prepared by Charles M. Yerkes, in “Memoirs of the National Academy of Sciences”, Vol. 15.


TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES

  1. Silently corrected typographical errors and variations in spelling.
  2. Retained anachronistic, non-standard, and uncertain spellings as printed.

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