MASCULINITY, ALLIED occupation of Germany, 1945-1955, SOCIAL conditions in Germany, YOUTH policy, YOUTH, JUVENILE delinquency, HOMELESSNESS, BLACK marketeers, HISTORY
Abstract
An essay is presented on the social construction of masculinity in post-World War II Germany, with a particular focus on discourses surrounding male juvenile delinquency in Munich during the years immediately following the war. According to the author, concerns over juvenile delinquency were used to justify interventionist measures of postwar reconstruction. Details on male youths' relationship to social problems such as homelessness and black marketeering are also presented.