Book description
Dr. Marshall’s third book recounts unusual, strange and sometimes downright dangerous advice that childcare 'experts’ gave to parents in Victorian times. Moral dangers were attributed to bicycle riding. In some circumstances, learning nursery rhymes was considered evil. While these admonitions and others seem humourous by today’s standards, there is a sinister side to this issue. At times, parenting advice threatened childrens health, if not their lives. In other cases, experts’ guidance spoke to motives far removed from child welfare: economic gain, political power, and the suppression of women were the cultural subtexts that informed experts’ thinking.
An interesting and enlightening review of parenting literature, Sex, Nursery Rhymes and Other Evils is also a cautionary tale for our times. In the final section, Dr. Marshall addresses the modern-day interest in child care and parenting as a 'profession:’ How much has changed since Victorian times? Is professional advice to be trusted or is it based more on personal bias and untested assumption than it is on fact? How expert are the experts?
Dr. Marshall concludes that there should be greater responsibility and accountability among those who have the opportunity to offer advice. Above all, experts must strive to be their own toughest critics – and parents, in considering professional advice, should trust their common sense and their own best judgement.




















