Gregory McNamee: TV, Family Values, and Presidential Elections
Blame it on television.
In 1992, then vice president Dan Quayle took the television comedy Murphy Brown to task because its lead, played by Candice Bergen, was to give birth out of wedlock. The show and its sponsors’ apparent endorsement of this transgression, Quayle argued, was proof that the entertainment industry was antifamily—or, at least, against the traditional American family as defined by Ozzie and Harriet, by the Cleavers and the Ricardos.
Quayle was right: television had moved beyond the comfortable, happy, two-parent family, an artifact that, at least to the scriptwriters, seemed to belong to a time past. The new TV household, the world of the Simpsons and Bundys and Connors, was something altogether different from those of the golden age.
Still, by making the prefab world of Happy Days an ideal for the age, Quayle opened himself to the perhaps justifiable charge that he could not sufficiently distinguish televised fiction from lived reality, much as George H. W. Bush seemingly could not comprehend shopping for one’s own groceries. Quayle’s appeal to replace Candice Bergen and her cohort with putatively more wholesome role models did not work: American voters did not endorse his viewpoint in the 1992 election, opting for soap opera instead. (For its part, Murphy Brown continues to air in syndication.)
It being an election year, the issue of family values is in the news again, tucked away amid talk of war and resource scarcity, often in the form of discussions about the rightness or wrongness of same-sex marriage, often couched in religious language. “Today,” writes social historian John Gillis in A World of Their Own Making, “both Democrats and Republicans deploy equally apocalyptic visions of family decline and social disorder. And although most Americans do not believe their own family life to be in immediate danger, they are quick to perceive their neighbors being in total disrepair.”
That perception is an old one, a current that has long flowed through our history. Barack Obama may trace the decline in family values to an uncaring government and economic system, John McCain to the corrupting influence of the welfare state and the Hollywoodization of the culture, but both will talk about them in some form or another. In the case of the latter, the assumption will almost certainly emerge that we once lived in a happy time where the two-parent, constantly together family was paramount, and that we have somehow fallen from this state of grace.
All golden ages are mythic. The one to which presidential candidates advert is no exception, growing from the idealized family of the 1950s, itself an idealized version of the family in the Depression Era, a bulwark of us-against-them struggle in the face of hard times. Those who lived in the 1950s—and in the 1920s and 1930s, though there are fewer of them left every day—will tell you that the reality was far different.
One of the cornerstones of the golden age is the notion of the family made up of partners who were monogamous, with sex contained within marriage. The census records show that, throughout our history, this was not always the case. Premarital pregnancy rates in most American states have never fallen below 10 percent, and sometimes have reached 30 percent, especially in rural areas. Little shame was attached to these out-of-wedlock adventures until recently. “Before the nineteenth century,” Gillis maintains, “no great fuss was made about premarital pregnancy or even illegitimate birth as long as the community was assured that it would not be unduly burdened by the child.” Indeed, childless couples were viewed as being somehow more unnatural than unwed teenage mothers, a view that still obtains in many parts of the world.
Another golden-age cornerstone is the presence of a father quietly prepared for all crises and on hand at every formative moment of his children’s lives. But throughout much of history, American fathers—and mothers—worked such long hours that they saw their children only on Sundays, their one day off. Leisure hours expanded in the 1950s and 1960s, but have since contracted again, and parents, at least those who have jobs, are likely to be absent as well from their children’s lives. Compulsory education was initially meant to be a remedy for this situation, replacing the ever-present parents of family workshop and farm with the authority of the state in loco parentis. Parents were left to carve out “quality time” for their families—as much a concern in Victorian times as now—in the tattered remnants of the week.
The golden age may never have existed, but it exerts a powerful influence on us. Among its manifestations, too, are the self-styled family restaurants that seem to dot every street corner, the soups and microwave-heated dinners marketed as homemade, and even the fact that some Las Vegas casinos are marketed as family destinations.
Times are changing; from 1970 to 2006, the number of American households made up of one person has increased from 13 to 26 percent of the total, while the percentage of children living with a single parent more than doubled. The trend continues. Yet the family itself endures, bending rather than breaking, through mechanisms like shared custody of children and, yes, same-sex marriage.
This is far from the television ideal of old; even the Simpsons live under one roof, while the Ricardos, one foot on the bedroom floor, and their cohort were resolutely heterosexual. It is far from the ideal that many of us, particularly the elders of the tribe, hold in our minds. But to yearn for a golden past that restores a condition in which men are the producers and women the directors of the real-life family drama is misguided. Watch for how that yearning plays out in this election.
Read entire article at Britannica Blog
In 1992, then vice president Dan Quayle took the television comedy Murphy Brown to task because its lead, played by Candice Bergen, was to give birth out of wedlock. The show and its sponsors’ apparent endorsement of this transgression, Quayle argued, was proof that the entertainment industry was antifamily—or, at least, against the traditional American family as defined by Ozzie and Harriet, by the Cleavers and the Ricardos.
Quayle was right: television had moved beyond the comfortable, happy, two-parent family, an artifact that, at least to the scriptwriters, seemed to belong to a time past. The new TV household, the world of the Simpsons and Bundys and Connors, was something altogether different from those of the golden age.
Still, by making the prefab world of Happy Days an ideal for the age, Quayle opened himself to the perhaps justifiable charge that he could not sufficiently distinguish televised fiction from lived reality, much as George H. W. Bush seemingly could not comprehend shopping for one’s own groceries. Quayle’s appeal to replace Candice Bergen and her cohort with putatively more wholesome role models did not work: American voters did not endorse his viewpoint in the 1992 election, opting for soap opera instead. (For its part, Murphy Brown continues to air in syndication.)
It being an election year, the issue of family values is in the news again, tucked away amid talk of war and resource scarcity, often in the form of discussions about the rightness or wrongness of same-sex marriage, often couched in religious language. “Today,” writes social historian John Gillis in A World of Their Own Making, “both Democrats and Republicans deploy equally apocalyptic visions of family decline and social disorder. And although most Americans do not believe their own family life to be in immediate danger, they are quick to perceive their neighbors being in total disrepair.”
That perception is an old one, a current that has long flowed through our history. Barack Obama may trace the decline in family values to an uncaring government and economic system, John McCain to the corrupting influence of the welfare state and the Hollywoodization of the culture, but both will talk about them in some form or another. In the case of the latter, the assumption will almost certainly emerge that we once lived in a happy time where the two-parent, constantly together family was paramount, and that we have somehow fallen from this state of grace.
All golden ages are mythic. The one to which presidential candidates advert is no exception, growing from the idealized family of the 1950s, itself an idealized version of the family in the Depression Era, a bulwark of us-against-them struggle in the face of hard times. Those who lived in the 1950s—and in the 1920s and 1930s, though there are fewer of them left every day—will tell you that the reality was far different.
One of the cornerstones of the golden age is the notion of the family made up of partners who were monogamous, with sex contained within marriage. The census records show that, throughout our history, this was not always the case. Premarital pregnancy rates in most American states have never fallen below 10 percent, and sometimes have reached 30 percent, especially in rural areas. Little shame was attached to these out-of-wedlock adventures until recently. “Before the nineteenth century,” Gillis maintains, “no great fuss was made about premarital pregnancy or even illegitimate birth as long as the community was assured that it would not be unduly burdened by the child.” Indeed, childless couples were viewed as being somehow more unnatural than unwed teenage mothers, a view that still obtains in many parts of the world.
Another golden-age cornerstone is the presence of a father quietly prepared for all crises and on hand at every formative moment of his children’s lives. But throughout much of history, American fathers—and mothers—worked such long hours that they saw their children only on Sundays, their one day off. Leisure hours expanded in the 1950s and 1960s, but have since contracted again, and parents, at least those who have jobs, are likely to be absent as well from their children’s lives. Compulsory education was initially meant to be a remedy for this situation, replacing the ever-present parents of family workshop and farm with the authority of the state in loco parentis. Parents were left to carve out “quality time” for their families—as much a concern in Victorian times as now—in the tattered remnants of the week.
The golden age may never have existed, but it exerts a powerful influence on us. Among its manifestations, too, are the self-styled family restaurants that seem to dot every street corner, the soups and microwave-heated dinners marketed as homemade, and even the fact that some Las Vegas casinos are marketed as family destinations.
Times are changing; from 1970 to 2006, the number of American households made up of one person has increased from 13 to 26 percent of the total, while the percentage of children living with a single parent more than doubled. The trend continues. Yet the family itself endures, bending rather than breaking, through mechanisms like shared custody of children and, yes, same-sex marriage.
This is far from the television ideal of old; even the Simpsons live under one roof, while the Ricardos, one foot on the bedroom floor, and their cohort were resolutely heterosexual. It is far from the ideal that many of us, particularly the elders of the tribe, hold in our minds. But to yearn for a golden past that restores a condition in which men are the producers and women the directors of the real-life family drama is misguided. Watch for how that yearning plays out in this election.