In his book Wylie claims that “of any civilization except ours in which an tire division of men has been used, during wartime . . . to spell out the word ‘mom’ on a drill field” (184). Wylie’s book is the most vitriolic attack ever launched on the American way of living-from politicians to professors to businessmen to Mom to sexual mores to religion. The book ranks with the works of De Tocqueville and Emerson in defining the American character and malaise. It wages war on all forms of American hypocrisy. Mom, mother, motherhood, maternity, eternity these were the charming words that echoed the American countryside during the 1950s. According to Erik H.Erikson in the psychosexual development of American character the centrality of “momism” has its own significance and he describes it as “a stereotyped caricature of existing contradictions which have emerged from intense, rapid, and as yet unintegrated changes in American history” (291). He continues his discussion
In his book Wylie claims that “of any civilization except ours in which an tire division of men has been used, during wartime . . . to spell out the word ‘mom’ on a drill field” (184). Wylie’s book is the most vitriolic attack ever launched on the American way of living-from politicians to professors to businessmen to Mom to sexual mores to religion. The book ranks with the works of De Tocqueville and Emerson in defining the American character and malaise. It wages war on all forms of American hypocrisy. Mom, mother, motherhood, maternity, eternity these were the charming words that echoed the American countryside during the 1950s. According to Erik H.Erikson in the psychosexual development of American character the centrality of “momism” has its own significance and he describes it as “a stereotyped caricature of existing contradictions which have emerged from intense, rapid, and as yet unintegrated changes in American history” (291). He continues his discussion