reed hist275 s05 syllabus

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  • 8/14/2019 Reed HIST275 S05 Syllabus

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    Jacqueline Dirks Eliot 214A, ext. 7675

    History 275/Fall 2005 Reed College

    Tuesdays and Thursdays, 1:10-2:30 p.m.

    Vollum 120

    HIST 275: Culture and Society in 19th-Century America

    Culture: "[denotes] those works and practices that have to do with the assigning or attribution of

    meaning and significance to the things, persons, and happenings of the material world."

    "Culture is formed by perceptions, intentions, and acts. It is a form of production or work

    requiring energy and time, involving human choices and social consequences, engaging

    materials and labor, and connecting the producer with the network of relationships--

    social, political, economic--that constitute his society."

    Richard Slotkin, The Fatal Environment, p. 21, 22

    This course will introduce students to the history of the United States in the nineteenth century.

    Course topics include the economic and social significance of slave and wage labor; the effects ofindustrialization and subsequent changes in work and leisure; the social, economic, and cultural

    changes wrought by civil war; urbanization and the problems of nineteenth century cities; the rise

    of the labor movement and agrarian populism; and the beginnings of urban reform in the 1890s.

    We will try to understand both culture (defined here as the ideals, values, and structures of

    meaning shared by Americans) and society (the social, economic and political institutions and

    frameworks which organized life) in this period. Culture and society are not static entities; they

    change and evolve. Our goal is to try to understand and interpret evidence of how culture and

    society have changed over time.

    We will pay particular attention to analyzing events and ideas in the nineteenth century, and

    trying to understand the meanings attributed to them by nineteenth-century observers. Wherewere the boundaries of "the frontier" in nineteenth century North America? What did enslaved

    people and wage earners mean when they invoked the term "freedom"? We will then ask how

    historians and students of history at the beginning of this twentieth-first century understand and

    make use of those same nineteenth-century events. The culture of nineteenth-century America

    was very different from our own, yet consider how many representations of it pervade the

    present, from popular movies to the PBS documentaries.

    Our study and writing of history explores and interprets the past, yet we cannot escape the

    perspective of the present. The purpose of this course is to provide you with the intellectual tools

    with which to assess and understand the work historians do, and begin to develop your own

    perspective on the American past.

    The following books are required reading. They are available at the Reed College

    Bookstore and on Book Reserve for HIST 275 in the Reed Library:

    Paul E. Johnson,A Shopkeepers Millennium (1976)

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    Thursday, Sept. 1

    Required reading:

    Begin Paul E. Johnson,A Shopkeepers Millennium (1976)

    [Book reserve]

    Week Two

    Expansion and Evangelicalism

    September 6, 8

    Required reading:

    Finish Johnson,A Shopkeepers Millennium (1976)

    [Book reserve]Mary Ryan, "A Woman's Awakening: Evangelical Religion and the Families of Utica,

    New York, 1800-1840,"American Quarterly 30 (Winter 1978): 602-623

    [Article, e-reserve and on JSTOR]

    Jama Lazerow,Rethinking Religion and the Working Class in Antebellum America,

    Mid-America 1993 75(1): 85-104

    [Article and e-reserve]

    Suggested for further study:

    Melvyn Stokes and Stephen Conway, eds., The Market Revolution in America:

    Social, Political and Religious Expressions, 1800-1880 (UVA Press, 1996)

    Jama Lazerow,Religion and the Working Class in Antebellum America

    (Smithsonian Institution Press 1995)

    Mary Ryan, Cradle of the Middle Class (1981)

    William J. Rorabaugh, The Alcoholic Republic (1979)

    See also the brief biography of Charles Grandison Finney at

    http://xroads.virginia.edu/~HYPER/DETOC/religion/finney.html

    Week Three

    Market Revolution: Lowell, Massachusetts

    September 13

    Required reading:

    Thomas Dublin, Farm to Factory (Book reserve)

    (Please read selected letters first, then read the historian's Introduction, then theremaining letters. Selections will be announced in class.)

    September 15

    Required reading:

    Lise Vogel, "Hearts to Feel and Tongues to Speak: New England Mill Women in the

    Early Nineteenth Century," in Bruce Laurie and Milton Cantor, eds., Class, Sex and the

    Woman Worker (Greenwood Press, 1977): 64-82

    [Article and e-reserve]

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    Suggested for further study:

    Lucy Larcom,A New England Girlhood, Outlined From Memory

    (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1889)

    Thomas Dublin, Women at Work: The Transformation of Work and Community in

    Lowell, Massachusetts, 1826-1860 (1979)

    Jonathan Prude, The Coming of Industrial Order (1983)Jonathan Glickstein, Concepts of Free Labor in Antebellum America (1991)

    Christopher Sellers,Market Revolution: Jacksonian America, 1815-1846(1991)

    Please check out the Web site of the Lowell National Historical Park, Lowell, MA:

    http://www.nps.gov/lowe/

    Week 4

    The Economics and Experience of Slavery

    September 20, 22

    Required reading:James Oakes, Slavery & Freedom, Intro., Ch. 1 "Outsiders," & Ch. 2

    "Slavery & Liberal Capitalism" p. 3-79 [Book reserve]

    Assigned reading for 7-8 page paper:

    Frederick Douglass,Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass (1845)

    in Gates, Classic Slave Narratives p. 245-331 (Book reserve)

    The first short paper (8 pages) is due Thursday, September 22

    IN CLASS. We will discuss your papers in class; no extensions will

    be granted.

    Further reading on the history of slavery:David Brion Davis, Slavery and Human Progress (1984)

    Ira Berlin,Many Thousands Gone: Two Centuries of Slavery in North America

    (Cambridge, MA: The Belknap Press/Harvard U. Press, 1998)

    Week 5

    Free Wage Labor

    September 27

    Required reading:

    Jonathan Glickstein, Pressures from Below: Pauperism, Chattel Slavery, and the

    Ideological Construction of Free Market Labor, Radical History Review 69 (1997):

    114-159[Article and e-reserve]

    Christine Stansell, Women, Children and the Uses of the Streets: Class and Gender

    Conflict in New York City, 1850-1860,Feminist Studies 1982 8(2): 309-335.

    [Article, e-reserve and JSTOR]

    September 29

    Required reading:

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    Richard Oestricher, "Terence Powderly, the Knights of Labor and Artisanal

    Republicanism," p. 30-61 in Melvyn Dubofsky and Warren Van Tine, eds.,Labor

    Leaders in America (University of Illinois Press, 1987) [article and e-reserve]

    Suggested for further study:

    David Montgomery, "The Working Class of the Pre-Industrial City,"

    Labor History 9 (1968) 3-22Bruce Laurie, Working People of Philadelphia, 1800-1850 (1980)

    Sean Wilentz, Chants Democratic: New York City and the Rise of the

    American Working Class, 1788-1850 (1984)

    Christine Stansell, City of Women: Sex and Class in New York, 1789-1860 (1986)

    Lori Ginzburg, Women and the Work of Benevolence (1990)

    REQUIRED LECTURE:

    You are to attend the historian Richard Whites presentation on environmental

    history and the American West.

    Week 6Declaring The Rights of Woman

    October 4

    Required reading:

    Judith Wellman, "The Seneca Falls Women's Rights Convention: A Study of Social Networks,"

    Journal of Women's History 3:1 (Spring): 9-37.

    [Article and e-reserve]

    October 6

    Required reading:

    Nell Irvin Painter, Difference, Slavery and Memory: Sojourner Truth in Feminist Abolitionism,

    in Jean Fagan Yellin and John C. Van Horne, eds., The Abolitionist Sisterhood: Womens

    Political Culture in Antebellum America (Cornell, 1994): 139-158.[Article and e-reserve]

    Week 7

    October 11, 13

    The Antebellum West: "Freedom" on the "Frontier"

    Required reading:

    Richard White, 'It's Your Misfortune and None of My Own"

    Chapters 3-9, pages 55-211. [Book reserve]

    The second paper (10 pages) is due Friday, October 14. This paper will reflect your analysisof selected articles (your choice) from The Nation published from 1865 through 1871. Reed

    owns the digital archive of this magazine, which is available at

    http://www.archive.thenation.com/index_login.asp

    FALL BREAK OCTOBER 15-23

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    Week 8

    Slavery and the Coming of War

    October 25, 27

    Required reading:

    James Oakes, Slavery and Freedom, Ch. 3, "Slaveholders and Nonslaveholders" and Ch.

    4, "Slaves and Masters" in Slavery and Freedom, 80-194 and Epilogue

    Required reading:

    James McPherson, Ordeal By Fire, Chapters 4-9, 53-145 [Book Reserve]

    And for debate:

    James McPherson, Who Freed the Slaves? and Ira Berlin, Emancipation and Its

    Meaning in American Life, inReconstruction 2: 3 (1994): 35-44

    [Article and e-reserve]

    PLEASE BE PREPARED TO DEFEND A POSITION IN CLASS!!

    Suggested for further study:Eric Foner, Free Soil, Free Labor, Free Men: The Ideology of the Republican Party

    Before the Civil War (Oxford U. Press, 1970)

    William Gienapp, The Origins of the Republican Party, 1852-1856(1987)

    Ira Berlin, Joseph P. Reidy, and Leslie S. Rowland, Freedom's Soldiers: The Black

    Military Experience in the Civil War [Freedom and Southern Society Project.] (New

    York: Cambridge U. Press, 1998)

    Week 9

    The Aftermath of Civil War: Reconstruction and the Meanings of Freedom

    November 1, 3David Montgomery, "The American Civil War and the Meanings of Freedom," (1987): 1-

    22 [Article and e-reserve]

    Eric Foner,A Short History of Reconstruction

    [Book reserve]

    Week 10

    Postwar Politics

    November 8, 10

    Required reading:Rebecca Edwards,Angels in the Machinery: Gender in American Party Politics from the

    Civil to the Progressive Era

    [Book reserve]

    Week 11

    November 15, 17

    Required reading:

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    Nell Irvin Painter, Standing at Armageddon: The United States, 1877-1919 Introduction;

    Chapters 1-5

    [Book reserve]

    Suggested for further study:

    Lawrence Goodwyn, The Populist Moment: A Short History of the Agrarian Revolt in

    America (Oxford, 1978)Peter Argersinger, The Limits of Agrarian Radicalism: Western

    Populism and American Politics (University of Kansas Press, 1995)

    Jeffrey Ostler, Prairie Populists: The Fate of Agrarian Radicalism in Kansas, Nebraska

    and Iowa, 1880-1892 (University of Kansas Press, 1992)

    The third paper (10-12 pages) is due Friday, November 18 by 5:00 p.m. at Eliot 214A. For this

    paper you may choose your own topic, but the paper must use at least two secondary sources on

    a topic from the period after the Civil War. We will discuss possible topics and sources in class.

    Week 12

    Labor in the New CenturyNovember 22

    Required reading:

    James Barrett and David Roediger, "'In-Between Peoples': Race, Nationality and the

    New Immigrant Working Class,Journal of American Ethnic History (Spring 1997): 3-

    43.

    [Article, e-reserve and Academic Search Premier]

    Suggested for further study:

    David Roediger, Working Toward Whiteness: How Americas Immigrants Became White

    (Basic Books, 2005)

    November 24-27 THANKSGIVING VACATION

    Week 13

    Mapping Ethnic New York in the 1890s

    November 29, December 1

    Required reading:

    Jacob Riis,How the Other Half Lives (1890), selections

    (Book reserve)

    Note: Students should take a look at the hypertext edition of

    Riis,How the Other Half Lives athttp://www.cis.yale.edu/amstud/inforev/riis/title.html

    Suggested for further study:

    Ellen Fitzpatrick,Muckraking: Three Landmark Articles (Bedford Books, 1994)

    Maren Stange, Symbols of Ideal Life: Social Documentary Photography in America,

    1890-1950 (1989)

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    New Frontiers: U.S. Imperialism

    Final Class

    Tuesday, December 6

    Required reading:

    Kristin Hoganson, Fighting for American Manhood: How Gender Politics Provoked the

    Spanish-American and Philippine-American Wars (Selections) [Book reserve]