John Wiley & Sons Women in American History to 1880 Cover Women in American History To 1880 presents a collection of over 70 primary source documents that ill.. Product #: 978-1-4443-3118-9 Regular price: $36.36 $36.36 Auf Lager

Women in American History to 1880

A Documentary Reader

Faulkner, Carol (Herausgeber)

Uncovering the Past: Documentary Readers in American History

Cover

1. Auflage Februar 2011
216 Seiten, Softcover
Wiley & Sons Ltd

ISBN: 978-1-4443-3118-9
John Wiley & Sons

Women in American History To 1880 presents a collection of
over 70 primary source documents that illuminate the diverse
experiences of women from America's colonial period through
Reconstruction.

* Features images, poems, newspaper articles, and letters not
found in other collections

* Offers a balanced approach to women's experiences by
representing a diversity of voices and focusing on themes of work,
citizenship, representations, and domestic lives

* Includes an introductory chapter, document headnotes, questions
for further discussion after each chapter, and a bibliography for
further study, designed to encourage students to engage with the
text

List of Illustrations

Series Editors' Preface

Source Acknowledgments

Introduction

1. Seekers, 1540-1680

2. Colonists and Colonized, 1680-1730

3. Conceptions of Liberty, 1730-1780

4. Revolution, 1780-1810

5. Awakenings, 1810-1835

6. Contested Spheres, 1835-1845

7. Partisans, 1845-1860

8. Civil Wars

9. Redefining Citizenship, 1865-1880

Further Reading

Index
"Carol Faulkner has assembled a vivid patchwork of American
voices with an elegant, inclusive design. Readers will follow
three centuries of women's progress and protest, gaining a
comprehensive first-hand understanding of the scope of American
female experience."

Megan Marshall, author of The Peabody Sisters: Three Women
Who Ignited American Romanticism



"Using an impressive range of source material and offering
thought-provoking discussion questions, Carol Faulkner's
documentary reader reflects the diversity of women's
experiences and calls attention to the centrality of women in
American history."

Anya Jabour, editor of Major Problems in the History of American
Families and Children and author of Topsy-Turvy: How the Civil War
Turned the World Upside Down for Southern Children.

"By selecting documents that range from the English
colonies to French Louisiana and Spanish New Mexico, Carol Faulkner
offers readers a fascinating array of early American women's
lives: Indian and African American women; Catholic and
Protestant women; plebian, middling, and elite women; and girls as
well as adult women. Her brisk introduction raises
provocative questions about women's varied roles in early America,
and encourages students to see their experiences as foundational to
American history."

Ann M. Little, Colorado State University
Carol Faulkner is an Associate Professor of History at Syracuse University. She is the author of Women's Radical Reconstruction: The Freedmen's Aid Movement (2003) and is currently writing a biography of Lucretia Mott. Faulkner has also taught American women's history at SUNY Geneseo, where she received the Chancellor's Award for Excellence in Teaching.

C. Faulkner, Syracuse University, USA