2010-2011 Academic Catalog 
    
    May 03, 2024  
2010-2011 Academic Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

HIST 039 - At Home in 19th Century America: Domesticity and American Culture

Type of Course: First-Year Seminar
In order to underscore both the unity and diversity of nineteenth-century cultural life, this course revisits the variety of places Americans called home –middle-class suburban houses to working-class tenements, frontier dugouts to urban settlement houses–while considering the shifting interpretations of these spaces from within and without. Beginning with the rise of home as a haven from the uncertainties of public life, it traces the popular celebration of home as a moral force, notes the movement of domesticity into the public worlds of politics and reform, and concludes with a consideration of home’s relationship with and penetration by and of the marketplace. Fulfills Historial Perspective.

Instructor: Ms. Richter

When Offered: Offered periodically.

Faculty: Amy Richter, Ph.D. Associate Professor of History