Understanding Richard Washburn Child’s Authoritarian Personality: From Theodor Adorno to the Histories of Gender and Emotion

The personality of Richard Washburn Child, who was the US ambassador to Italy from 1921 to 1924, bears a close resemblance to the potential fascist described by Theodor Adorno et al. in The Authoritarian Personality. Instead of the psychoanalytical explanations favored in the 1950 study, this articl...

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Main Author: Katy Hull
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: European Association for American Studies 2023-07-01
Series:European Journal of American Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/ejas/20231
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author Katy Hull
author_facet Katy Hull
author_sort Katy Hull
collection DOAJ
description The personality of Richard Washburn Child, who was the US ambassador to Italy from 1921 to 1924, bears a close resemblance to the potential fascist described by Theodor Adorno et al. in The Authoritarian Personality. Instead of the psychoanalytical explanations favored in the 1950 study, this article uses theories developed by historians of gender and emotions to understand Child’s personality. It shows how Child’s “emotional community” (which was populated by social elites but also informed by mass culture) fostered his aggressive masculinity, chauvinism, hyper-ambition, and a lack of self-criticism. These personality traits in turn lent themselves to Child’s support of Mussolini and Italian fascism. This research suggests that the authoritarian personality type is neither ahistorical nor an indelible feature of modernity, but a product of specific enabling communities.
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spelling doaj-art-c3969ba8bca048a3894707f20bacb38b2025-01-06T09:08:06ZengEuropean Association for American StudiesEuropean Journal of American Studies1991-93362023-07-0118210.4000/ejas.20231Understanding Richard Washburn Child’s Authoritarian Personality: From Theodor Adorno to the Histories of Gender and EmotionKaty HullThe personality of Richard Washburn Child, who was the US ambassador to Italy from 1921 to 1924, bears a close resemblance to the potential fascist described by Theodor Adorno et al. in The Authoritarian Personality. Instead of the psychoanalytical explanations favored in the 1950 study, this article uses theories developed by historians of gender and emotions to understand Child’s personality. It shows how Child’s “emotional community” (which was populated by social elites but also informed by mass culture) fostered his aggressive masculinity, chauvinism, hyper-ambition, and a lack of self-criticism. These personality traits in turn lent themselves to Child’s support of Mussolini and Italian fascism. This research suggests that the authoritarian personality type is neither ahistorical nor an indelible feature of modernity, but a product of specific enabling communities.https://journals.openedition.org/ejas/20231modernitygenderItalymasculinityemotionsauthoritarian personality
spellingShingle Katy Hull
Understanding Richard Washburn Child’s Authoritarian Personality: From Theodor Adorno to the Histories of Gender and Emotion
European Journal of American Studies
modernity
gender
Italy
masculinity
emotions
authoritarian personality
title Understanding Richard Washburn Child’s Authoritarian Personality: From Theodor Adorno to the Histories of Gender and Emotion
title_full Understanding Richard Washburn Child’s Authoritarian Personality: From Theodor Adorno to the Histories of Gender and Emotion
title_fullStr Understanding Richard Washburn Child’s Authoritarian Personality: From Theodor Adorno to the Histories of Gender and Emotion
title_full_unstemmed Understanding Richard Washburn Child’s Authoritarian Personality: From Theodor Adorno to the Histories of Gender and Emotion
title_short Understanding Richard Washburn Child’s Authoritarian Personality: From Theodor Adorno to the Histories of Gender and Emotion
title_sort understanding richard washburn child s authoritarian personality from theodor adorno to the histories of gender and emotion
topic modernity
gender
Italy
masculinity
emotions
authoritarian personality
url https://journals.openedition.org/ejas/20231
work_keys_str_mv AT katyhull understandingrichardwashburnchildsauthoritarianpersonalityfromtheodoradornotothehistoriesofgenderandemotion