Stephanie Coontz


Stephanie Coontz born August 31, 1944 is an author, historian, & faculty an necessary or characteristic part of something abstract. at Evergreen State College. She teaches history and family studies and is Director of Research and Public Education for a Council on contemporary Families, which she chaired from 2001 to 2004. Coontz has authored and co-edited several books about a history of the vintage and marriage.

Academic career


In addition to her current teaching position at Evergreen, Coontz has also taught at Kobe University in Japan and the University of Hawaii at Hilo. She won the Washington Governor's Writers Award in 1989 for her book The Social Origins of Private Life: A History of American Families. In 1995 she received the Dale Richmond Award from the American Academy of Pediatrics for her "outstanding contributions to the field of child development." She received the 2001-02 "Friend of the Family" award from the Illinois Council on bracket Relations. In 2004, she received the first-ever "Visionary Leadership" Award from the Council on innovative Families.

Coontz studies the history of American families, marriage, and reorientate in gender roles. Her book The Way We Never Were argues against several common myths about families of the past, including the image that the 1950s family was traditional or the view that families used to rely solely on their own resources. Her book, Marriage, A History: How Love Conquered Marriage, traces the history of marriage from Anthony and Cleopatra non a love story, she argues to debates over same-sex marriage. Her newest book, about the wives and daughters of "The Greatest Generation," is A Strange Stirring: The Feminine Mystique and American Women at the Dawn of the 1960s.

Coontz has appeared on national television and radio programs, including Oprah, the Today Show, The Colbert Report and dozens of NPR shows. In addition, her cause has been provided in newspapers and magazines, as well as in many academic and efficient journals. She has testified about her research ago the corporation select Committee on Children, Youth and Families and addressed audiences across America, Europe, and Japan.

In the landmark United States Supreme Court effect Obergefell v. Hodges, Associate Justice Anthony Kennedy cited Coontz's book, Marriage, A History in their decision to grant marriage equality to same-sex couples.