This dissertation argues that domesticity is a set of malleable tropes that must be historicized according to location. It focuses on representations of marriage, keeping house, the home ideal, and motherhood in San Francisco, New Orleans, New York, and Liberia at the turn of the twentieth century. Between 1877 and 1919, as the United Stated changed shape after Reconstruction, new kinds of social relationships emerged between women and men of Anglo, African, Spanish, French, Japanese, Irish, German, Chinese, and Jewish descent. As a result of the migrations that facilitated such encounters, the texture of American home life was in flux and distinctive versions of domesticity, which I designate bachelor, sexualized, homeless, and interracial...
his dissertation examines the rhetoric of the homestead movement in antebellum America as a particul...
My dissertation investigates the experiences of southern African American women migrating to New Yor...
This dissertation examines representations of domestic discord in California literature with the ar...
This dissertation examines domesticity as a cultural backbone supporting the broader culture in the ...
For the female characters included in this study, the home is the everyday. Many people spend the ma...
Critics of American literature have traditionally examined the use of certain settings, e.g., the wi...
The Cult of Domesticity is the popular name for the rigid set of feminine ideals that proliferated i...
Domestic Visions reexamines the tradition of the urban novel in America by reading the works of Nath...
In my dissertation, “The Elite Domestic Sphere: Identity, Memory and Nostalgia in Literatures of U.S...
In the eighteenth century and earlier, domesticity functions as the practice of housekeeping. During...
This dissertation probes the relationship between sexuality and the home in American literature from...
My dissertation, “‘A House Is Not a Home”: African American Literature and the Problematic Significa...
In Dwelling in Possibility: American Literature, Architecture, and Domestic Innovation, 1850-1900, I...
Throughout the early to mid-nineteenth century, the Cult of Domesticity thrived in both southern and...
In my dissertation, Dirty Work: Domestic Service and the Making of the Middle-Class in Modern Women...
his dissertation examines the rhetoric of the homestead movement in antebellum America as a particul...
My dissertation investigates the experiences of southern African American women migrating to New Yor...
This dissertation examines representations of domestic discord in California literature with the ar...
This dissertation examines domesticity as a cultural backbone supporting the broader culture in the ...
For the female characters included in this study, the home is the everyday. Many people spend the ma...
Critics of American literature have traditionally examined the use of certain settings, e.g., the wi...
The Cult of Domesticity is the popular name for the rigid set of feminine ideals that proliferated i...
Domestic Visions reexamines the tradition of the urban novel in America by reading the works of Nath...
In my dissertation, “The Elite Domestic Sphere: Identity, Memory and Nostalgia in Literatures of U.S...
In the eighteenth century and earlier, domesticity functions as the practice of housekeeping. During...
This dissertation probes the relationship between sexuality and the home in American literature from...
My dissertation, “‘A House Is Not a Home”: African American Literature and the Problematic Significa...
In Dwelling in Possibility: American Literature, Architecture, and Domestic Innovation, 1850-1900, I...
Throughout the early to mid-nineteenth century, the Cult of Domesticity thrived in both southern and...
In my dissertation, Dirty Work: Domestic Service and the Making of the Middle-Class in Modern Women...
his dissertation examines the rhetoric of the homestead movement in antebellum America as a particul...
My dissertation investigates the experiences of southern African American women migrating to New Yor...
This dissertation examines representations of domestic discord in California literature with the ar...