Fall 2012

Antebellum Culture: North and South

Listed in: History, as HIST-454

Faculty

Martha Saxton (Section 01)

Description

(Offered as HIST  454 [US] and WAGS 354.)  This research seminar will be focused on the development of family life and law, religion, and literature in the pre-Civil War North and South.  Students will read material on childrearing practices and the production of gender; conventions of romantic love; the customs and legalities of marriage, parenthood, and divorce; social and geographic mobility; the emergence of the novel, magazines and newspapers; and the role and shape of violence in the North and South. We will discuss contrasts in these developments, many resulting from the strengthening southern commitment to race-based slavery. We will look at these trends through the growth of a national,  white Protestant middle class and at the ways in which members of other groups adopted, rejected, or created alternatives to them. Readings will include secondary and primary sources including memoirs, novels, short stories, essays and diary entries. Students will write one twenty-page essay based on original research.

Not open to first-year students.  Limited to 15 students. Fall semester.  Professor Saxton.

HIST 454 - L/D

Section 01
W 02:00 PM - 04:00 PM CHAP 101

Offerings

2024-25: Not offered
Other years: Offered in Fall 2012