Emotions in the US During the Long Nineteenth Century - Matt, Susan J.; (ed.) - Prospero Internet Bookshop

 
Product details:

ISBN13:9781032150659
ISBN10:1032150653
Binding:Hardback
No. of pages:286 pages
Size:234x156 mm
Language:English
700
Category:

Emotions in the US During the Long Nineteenth Century

Volume I: 1800?1865
 
Edition number: 1
Publisher: Routledge
Date of Publication:
 
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Short description:

This collection of primary sources examines the history of emotions in the United States, spanning the years 1800-1865. This fascinating collection of materials, alongside extensive editorial commentary, will be of great interest to students of American History and the History of Emotions.

Long description:

This collection of primary sources examines the history of emotions in the United States, spanning the years 1800-1865. This period was filled with dramatic political, social and economic changes, including the development of a new national identity, the spread of chattel slavery, the rise of capitalism, the surge of religious revivalism, military and settler expansion into Native American, Mexican, and British lands, and the Civil War. While these events have been well studied, this collection explores these upheavals using the lens of the history of emotions. The volumes bring together a rich group of primary sources demonstrating how Americans responded to these large public events. It also includes sources that trace the more private and subjective experiences of daily life during the 19th century, for the era was witness to significant transformations in ideals of family and romantic love, conceptions of honour and courage, anger and indignation, selfishness and greed. It also was a period when new emotions like homesickness and boredom appeared. This fascinating collection of materials, alongside extensive editorial commentary, will be of great interest to students of American History and the History of Emotions.

Table of Contents:

Volume I 1800?1865


Introduction


Bibliograph


PART 1: Settler Colonialism and Native American emotions


1 Ma-Ka-Tai-Me-She-Kia-Kiak Describes Daily Life and How It Changed


2 On Indian Removal


Andrew Jackson


3 The Choctaw?s Farewell


George W. Harkins


4 Address on the Present Condition and Prospects of the Aboriginal Inhabitants of North America, with Particular Reference to the Seneca Nation, Delivered at Buffalo, New York


Maris B. Pierce


5 Eulogy on King Philip, as Pronounced at the Odeon, in Federal Street, Boston


William Apess



PART 2: Civic Emotions


6 Of the Mode of Education Proper in a Republic


Benjamin Rush


7 Love of Country and The Soldier?s Adieu


8 The Cincinnati Election ? Disgraceful Riot


9 Fredrika Bremer Describes ?Indignation Meetings?


10 The Sumner Outrage; Indignation Meeting at the Tabernacle. Tremendous and Enthusiastic Gathering?


11 William Apess on Plymouth Rock and the 4th of July


12 What to the Slave Is the Fourth of July?


Frederick Douglass


13 Declaration of Sentiments


Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia Mott


PART 3: Managing Emotions


14 David Gouverneur Burnet, to Mattie


15 A Mother?s Charge


Sarah A. Campbell


16 Advice to Young Ladies on Their Duties and Conduct in Life


T. S. Arthur


17 With Sabre and Scalpel: The Autobiography of a Soldier and Surgeon


John Allan Wyeth


18 The First Quarrel


Alice Neal


19 The Fugitive Blacksmith; Or, Events in the History of James W.C. Pennington, Pastor of a Presbyterian Church, New York, Formerly A Slave in the State of Maryland, United States


James W. C. Pennington


20 My Bondage and My Freedom


Frederick Douglass


PART 4: Slavery and Emotion


21 The Slave?s New Year?s Day


Harriet A. Jacobs


22 What Became of the Slaves on A Georgia Plantation? Great Auction Sale of Slaves at Savannah, Georgia, March 2d and 3d, 1859; A Sequel to Mrs. Kemble?s Journal


23 Cannibals All! Or, Slaves Without Masters


George Fitzhugh


24 ?A Sorrowful Face?


Elizabeth Keckley


25 My Bondage and My Freedom


Frederick Douglass


PART 5: Love


26 Spiritual Welfare of Children


Bradley Miner


27 The Love Letters of Theodore Weld and Angelina Grimk?


28 Advice to Young Ladies on Their Duties and Conduct in Life


T. S. Arthur


29 The Family Monitor, Or a Help to Domestic Happiness


John Angell James


30 Abream Scriven Writes to His Wife, Dinah Jones, Sept. 19, 1858


31 Jonathan Zimmerman?s Letters to Benjamin Kenaga


32 The Diary of Albert Dodd, 1837 (excerpts)


33 Ma-Ka-Tai-Me-She-Kia-Kiak Describes the Crane Dance and Courting among the Sac


PART 6: Grief


34 Ma-Ka-Tai-Me-She-Kia-Kiak Describes Mourning among the Sac


35 Comfort for the Widow


Fanny Fern


36 Mother, What Is Death?


37 Green-Wood Cemetery


Nehemiah Cleaveland


38 Charles Ball?s Account of a Funeral of an Enslaved Child


39 ?Customs of the Slaves, When One of Their Number Dies?


Peter Randolph


PART 7: The Market Revolution


40 The Tablet


41 The Love of Money Sets the Whole Animal Machine in Motion


Benjamin Rush


42 Hasting to be Rich. A Sermon, Occasioned by the Present Excitement Respecting The Gold of California, Preached in the Cities of New Haven and Bridgeport, Jan. and Feb. 1849


E. L. Cleaveland


43 A Letter from Mary Lucinda Hovey to Elizabeth M. Stevens, August 8, 1847


44 The Spirit of Discontent


Almira


45 Thomas Butler Gunn on His Love of and Loathing for Money


46 The Ruling Passion of Men


47 Singular Attempt at Suicide


48 Best Temperament for a Business Man


49 Are We a Happy People?


PART 8: Emotion, Immigration, and Migration


50 Men, Manners and Things in Iowa


51 A True Picture of Emigration


Rebecca Burlend


52 A Yankee Trader in the Gold Rush; The Letters of Franklin A. Buck


53 Mary Ballou?s Letters to Her Son


54 The Emotional Effects of Piano Music on Gold Miners


Rosana Margaret (Kroh) Blake Alverson


PART 9: Technology and Emotional Life


55 A Kind and Wise Hint


56 Quick Travel


Samuel Breck


57 The Atlantic Telegraph: A Discourse Preached in the South Congregational Church, Brooklyn


Rufus W. Clark


58 Delia Locke on the Trans-Atlantic Telegraph


59 Daguerreotypes


60 Delia Locke on Photography


61 Abigail Mansur Pleads for Daguerreotypes


PART 10: The Civil War


62 Keep Up Good Courage, E. Hill to Bruce Elmore


63 Two Brothers Fallen


Hawkeye


64 The Death of Lieutenant Henry Ropes


George Anson Bruce


65 Just Before the Battle, Mother


Geo F. Root


66 Bruce Elmore Writes to His Wife, Libbie Elmore


67 Letter from Richmond


G. H. White


68 Letter from South Carolina


John Collins


69 Mary Livermore Tries to Raise Soldiers? Morale


70 The Evils of Youthful Enlistments and Nostalgia


De Witt C. Peters


71 ?Lincoln?s Proclamation?


72 Retaliation in Camp