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Caitlin Flanagan - Caitlin Flanagan

Caitlin Flanagan

Caitlin Flanagan - Caitlin Flanagan
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Review: Non-fiction

The return of June Cleaver

From Saturday's Globe and Mail

In the final chapter of Girl Land, Caitlin Flanagan’s 1920s-to-now investigation into the all-consuming, elusive and occasionally excruciating universe of the teenage girl, the author makes a significant, though not altogether shocking, confession: She has sons, not daughters.

Of course, this doesn’t automatically disqualify her from astute observation, but it could explain why her rendering of the territory in question seems as in touch with the average American teenager as an episode of Gossip Girl.

In theory, the book is must-read material, or at the very least brimming with chardonnay-soaked, book-club-debate potential: Flanagan, a contrarian author and social critic known best for her championing of the American housewife and trashing of myriad feminist ideals (think June Cleaver meets Ann Coulter lite), shifts her focus away from mommy in the kitchen (the subject of her 2006 treatise, To Hell With All That) and heads upstairs, behind the perennially shut bedroom door of the family’s most mercurial and certainly most mysterious member, the adolescent daughter who, if you buy into Flanagan’s take, hasn’t changed much since she was darning her bobby socks and deciding which poodle skirt to wear to the dance.

In the introduction, Flanagan states her agenda: to examine “the great and unchanging questions of Girl Land, as they are asked and answered in the ever-shifting landscape of today’s youth culture,” and then all but abandons the notion for most of the first six chapters (in total, there are only eight).

In Chapter 2, Flanagan takes us into the world of dating, a term that we learn came about almost a full century ago, in 1914, and ushered in an era of “parking,” “petting” and, yes, “snuggle pupping.” (Starting to feel like this is far from a modern mother’s handbook yet?)

She shares her own horrifying 1960s-era high-school dating experience involving a boy and unwanted sexual advances that could have been disastrous had she not reacted with vocal and physical outrage, but then stamps out any shot at reader empathy by establishing her present-day self as an unrelatable puritan: “Why in the world would I, a slight sixteen-year-old girl, have ever though it was a sensible and safe thing to go first to an empty house [her own family home, FYI] and then to a deserted beach with a boy I hardly knew, whom my parents had never met?”

To be clear, the boy in question went to her high school and she had known him casually for most of the school year. This is not to play down the incident (a brush with potential date rape is obviously scary and potentially scarring to a women of any age or era), but to point out that Flanagan’s criticism of her teenage self borders on blame-the-victim mentality.

Her solution to dating dangers is the proverbial shotgun-wielding father who treats his daughter’s potential suitors to the old “you hurt her and I’ll kill you” refrain (if a father is not available, Flanagan suggests a close family friend or uncle). This feels irrelevant to modern-day realities, where many girls have dabbled, if not dived head-first, into sex acts before a date even occurs.

Chapters on menstruation (“the first eviction notice from little girlhood”), prom (“bittersweet and emotionally overwrought”) and diaries (“a private, protected space for a girl to explore an emerging self … as she faces the task of leaving Girl Land behind”) feel equally Seventeen-magazine-fabricated, which, not coincidentally, proves to be one of Flanagan’s most frequent source materials.