History 476
Devine
Fall 2013
World War II & Youth Study Questions
Tuttle, Daddy’s Gone to War
– Chapter 3
- In
what ways did homefront children react to their
fathers going off to war? How did
reactions differ based on the age of the children?
- How
did the reaction of mothers to their husbands’ departures influence the
reactions of homefront children?
- What
were some of the ways mothers dealt with the absence of fathers during the
war? How did wartime mothers become
heroes in the eyes of their children?
- How
did the war affect the emotional lives of families? In what various ways were young children
in particular affected?
- Why
might World War II be called the “Grandmother’s War”? How were young children affected both
positively and negatively by spending so much time with grandparents and
other “surrogate parents”?
- How
did letters and other communications help sustain the relationships
between homefront children and their absent
fathers?
- How
did young children’s attitudes about the war change as the years
passed? Overall, what does the
author believe was the most significant impact of the war on homefront children?
Palladino, Teenagers
– Chapter 5
- How
did the realities of world war change the lives of teenagers and place
more demands on them?
- According
to the author, why did the nation need its servicemen to be “boys”? Why did the very qualities that had
marked boys as “delinquent” previously become desired and even “heroic” in
the wartime context?
- How
did the NYA prepare young people to contribute to the war effort? Was there more to the NYA than just job
training? Why did both parents and
teenagers see the NYA as the answer to their problems (if for different
reasons)?
- What
challenges did female NYA trainees face?
- As the
war progressed, why did the government change its tune and encourage teens
to stay in school? Why was continuing one’s education considered a
contribution to the war effort?
- Why
did teens fail to respond to government efforts to keep them in
school? Why did training programs
such as the “High School Victory Corps” (p. 72) have little appeal?
- Rather
than studying, how did young teens prefer to participate in the war
effort? What contributions did they make?
- How
did “doing without” affect
teenagers’ lives and youth culture during the war?
- What
were “V-girls”? How did their own
self-image differ from the way that adults saw them? Why did they attract national attention?
- How
did the reaction to the “V-girls” reveal the persistence of the sexual
double standard?
- Why
does the author say that the “V-girls” precipitated a “sexual revelation”
rather than a “sexual revolution”?
- What
factors caused the tensions between pachucos and
mainstream white society? Why did
both sides distrust each other?
- Why
did juvenile delinquency become a cause for concern during the war? What did the government due to address
the situation?