At Home in Nineteenth-Century America

At Home in Nineteenth-Century America
Title At Home in Nineteenth-Century America PDF eBook
Author Amy G. Richter
Publisher NYU Press
Total Pages 267
Release 2015-01-23
Genre History
ISBN 0814769144

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Few institutions were as central to nineteenth-century American culture as the home. Emerging in the 1820s as a sentimental space apart from the public world of commerce and politics, the Victorian home transcended its initial association with the private lives of the white, native-born bourgeoisie to cross lines of race, ethnicity, class, and region. Throughout the nineteenth century, home was celebrated as a moral force, domesticity moved freely into the worlds of politics and reform, and home and marketplace repeatedly remade each other. At Home in Nineteenth-Century America draws upon advice manuals, architectural designs, personal accounts, popular fiction, advertising images, and reform literature to revisit the variety of places Americans called home. Entering into middle-class suburban houses, slave cabins, working-class tenements, frontier dugouts, urban settlement houses, it explores the shifting interpretations and experiences of these spaces from within and without. Nineteenth-century homes and notions of domesticity seem simultaneously distant and familiar. This sense of surprise and recognition is ideal for the study of history, preparing us to view the past with curiosity and empathy, inspiring comparisons to the spaces we inhabit today—malls, movie theaters, city streets, and college campuses. Permitting us to listen closely to the nineteenth century’s sweeping conversation about home in its various guises, At Home in Nineteenth-Century America encourages us to hear our contemporary conversation about the significance and meaning of home anew while appreciating the lingering imprint of past ideals. Instructor's Guide

The Boardinghouse in Nineteenth-Century America

The Boardinghouse in Nineteenth-Century America
Title The Boardinghouse in Nineteenth-Century America PDF eBook
Author Wendy Gamber
Publisher JHU Press
Total Pages 258
Release 2007-04-16
Genre History
ISBN 9780801885716

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Listening to Nineteenth-century America

Listening to Nineteenth-century America
Title Listening to Nineteenth-century America PDF eBook
Author Mark Michael Smith
Publisher UNC Press Books
Total Pages 392
Release 2001
Genre History
ISBN 9780807849828

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Arguing for the importance of the aural dimension of history, Mark M. Smith contends that to understand what it meant to be northern or southern, slave or free--to understand sectionalism and the attitudes toward modernity that led to the Civil War--we mu

Home Fires

Home Fires
Title Home Fires PDF eBook
Author Sean Patrick Adams
Publisher JHU Press
Total Pages 281
Release 2014-04-17
Genre Technology & Engineering
ISBN 1421413582

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“Easily the most thorough and best-grounded account of the coal-based system of heating in the nineteenth-century United States . . . authoritative.” —The New England Quarterly Home Fires tells the fascinating story of how changes in home heating over the nineteenth century spurred the growth of networks that helped remake American society. Sean Patrick Adams reconstructs the ways in which the “industrial hearth” appeared in American cities, the methods that entrepreneurs in home heating markets used to convince consumers that their product designs and fuel choices were superior, and how elite, middle-class, and poor Americans responded to these overtures. Adams depicts the problem of dwindling supplies of firewood and the search for alternatives; the hazards of cutting, digging, and drilling in the name of home heating; the trouble and expense of moving materials from place to place; the rise of steam power; the growth of an industrial economy; and questions of economic efficiency, at both the individual household and the regional level. Home Fires makes it clear that debates over energy sources, energy policy, and company profit margins have been around a long time. The challenge of staying warm in the industrializing North becomes a window into the complex world of energy transitions, economic change, and emerging consumerism. Readers will understand the struggles of urban families as they sought to adapt to the ever-changing nineteenth-century industrial landscape. This perspective allows a unique view of the development of an industrial society not just from the ground up but from the hearth up. “This smartly written and well-informed book focuses on a subject that very few people think about—the history of home heating in America.” —Choice

A House Divided

A House Divided
Title A House Divided PDF eBook
Author Jonathan Daniel Wells
Publisher Routledge
Total Pages 385
Release 2016-11-10
Genre History
ISBN 1317352335

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Consolidating one of the most complex and multi-faceted eras in American History, this new edition of Jonathan Wells’s A House Divided unifies the broad and varied scholarship on the American Civil War. Amassing a variety of research, this accessible and readable text introduces readers to both the war and the Reconstruction period, and how Americans lived during this time of great upheaval in the country's history. Designed for a variety of subjects and teaching styles, this text not only looks at the Civil War from a historical perspective, but also analyzes its ramifications on the United States and American identities through the present day. This second edition has been updated throughout, incorporating new scholarship from recent studies on the Civil War era, and includes additional photographs and maps (now incorporated throughout the text), updated bibliographies, and a supplementary companion website.

At Home in the City

At Home in the City
Title At Home in the City PDF eBook
Author Elizabeth Klimasmith
Publisher UPNE
Total Pages 318
Release 2005
Genre History
ISBN 9781584654971

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A lucidly written analysis of urban literature and evolving residential architecture.

The Boardinghouse in Nineteenth-Century America

The Boardinghouse in Nineteenth-Century America
Title The Boardinghouse in Nineteenth-Century America PDF eBook
Author Wendy Gamber
Publisher JHU Press
Total Pages 236
Release 2007-04-16
Genre History
ISBN 080188571X

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