Commercial and social trends of the Gilded Age combined to give a unique and novel power to colorful advertising trade cards that were collected, exchanged, and preserved in scrapbooks by middle-class children living in the Northeast. These children were members of one of the earliest generations to grow up with mandatory co-educational schooling and to be part of a distinctive youth culture created through peer interactions. After 1876, advertising trade cards became ubiquitous and were a significant component of that peer culture. The cards were also innovative in that they were the first example of colored images to be made available to the public at no direct cost. For the children who amassed collections of advertising trade cards, the...
This study is an organized discovery of how the dominant, mainstream white culture dealt with the pr...
ABSTRACT: We explore the dynamic nature of society’s memories for and value ascribed to advertising ...
As we dive deeper into the Gilded Age, the students begin to understand the idea of change in this e...
Scholars have studied American advertising in terms of collectible Americana, histories of printing ...
This dissertation examines how and why visual imagery in selected advertising material in the United...
This article examines the materiality of advertising trade cards used in the Gilded Age United State...
This thesis examines graphic trade cards in eighteenth-century consumer cultures in Britain, France ...
This thesis examines graphic trade cards in eighteenth-century consumer cultures in Britain, France ...
"Since the advent of the American toy industry, children's cultural products have attempted to teach...
This research examined representations of ethnic and racial difference in toys from the late ninetee...
Between 1876 and 1900, large numbers of manufacturers began to advertise more widely in an effort to...
This thesis deals with the changing notions of American identity as conveyed and fashioned through ...
Food in the Gilded Age: What Ordinary Americans Ate. Robert Dirks. Lanham, Maryland: Rowman & Little...
This paper examines Gilded Age affluence by focusing on apparently inconsequential decorative goods ...
This dissertation examines the question of how the logic of capitalism became integral to U.S. citiz...
This study is an organized discovery of how the dominant, mainstream white culture dealt with the pr...
ABSTRACT: We explore the dynamic nature of society’s memories for and value ascribed to advertising ...
As we dive deeper into the Gilded Age, the students begin to understand the idea of change in this e...
Scholars have studied American advertising in terms of collectible Americana, histories of printing ...
This dissertation examines how and why visual imagery in selected advertising material in the United...
This article examines the materiality of advertising trade cards used in the Gilded Age United State...
This thesis examines graphic trade cards in eighteenth-century consumer cultures in Britain, France ...
This thesis examines graphic trade cards in eighteenth-century consumer cultures in Britain, France ...
"Since the advent of the American toy industry, children's cultural products have attempted to teach...
This research examined representations of ethnic and racial difference in toys from the late ninetee...
Between 1876 and 1900, large numbers of manufacturers began to advertise more widely in an effort to...
This thesis deals with the changing notions of American identity as conveyed and fashioned through ...
Food in the Gilded Age: What Ordinary Americans Ate. Robert Dirks. Lanham, Maryland: Rowman & Little...
This paper examines Gilded Age affluence by focusing on apparently inconsequential decorative goods ...
This dissertation examines the question of how the logic of capitalism became integral to U.S. citiz...
This study is an organized discovery of how the dominant, mainstream white culture dealt with the pr...
ABSTRACT: We explore the dynamic nature of society’s memories for and value ascribed to advertising ...
As we dive deeper into the Gilded Age, the students begin to understand the idea of change in this e...