The literature written around the Revolutionary War period is one full of imagery of families torn apart by bad decisions-- from fathers (and father figures) too harshly wielding power over their dependents, to children disobeying their parents or guardians, usually with grim results. The theme of family in disarray can be seen clearly in a larger context as two nations preoccupied with their own family ties unraveling. Some texts from this period show fathers as either absent or harsh to the point of being abusive, using their authority as the head of the home in a way that drives affection and obedience from them, instead of drawing it to them. Other texts show literal and figurative sons and daughters disobeying advice or even direct c...
The majority of historiography and literature regarding the American Revolution has a heavy focus on...
This study is a social and cultural history of fatherhood in New England and the Midwest from the ea...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 88-95)To men of early modern England, few things mattered...
Popular late 18th and early 19th c. American stories of daughter/father relationships feature either...
"Revolutionary Burdens" investigates the construction of political agency in Britain by looking at h...
This dissertation examines American fathers in the eighteenth century and argues that the American R...
It is the purpose of this article to analyze the representations of fatherhood in domestic literatur...
This project explores the anxieties and instabilities that inhere in representations of fatherhood i...
Fathers are often neglected in histories of family life in Britain. Family Men provides the first ac...
I make a distinction between gender roles and family roles in the literature of the antebellum Unite...
This article explores how George Eliot shows fathers in domestic life in her fiction by focusing on ...
How the American Revolution impacted masculinity, the home and ultimately fatherhoo
Twenty years ago, historian John Demos (1982) made the now widely cited point that “fatherhood has a...
In this chapter, stories of shame, anger and resistance are used to explore the tensions surrounding...
Within two generations, the primary reason that American children were deprived of a father shifted ...
The majority of historiography and literature regarding the American Revolution has a heavy focus on...
This study is a social and cultural history of fatherhood in New England and the Midwest from the ea...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 88-95)To men of early modern England, few things mattered...
Popular late 18th and early 19th c. American stories of daughter/father relationships feature either...
"Revolutionary Burdens" investigates the construction of political agency in Britain by looking at h...
This dissertation examines American fathers in the eighteenth century and argues that the American R...
It is the purpose of this article to analyze the representations of fatherhood in domestic literatur...
This project explores the anxieties and instabilities that inhere in representations of fatherhood i...
Fathers are often neglected in histories of family life in Britain. Family Men provides the first ac...
I make a distinction between gender roles and family roles in the literature of the antebellum Unite...
This article explores how George Eliot shows fathers in domestic life in her fiction by focusing on ...
How the American Revolution impacted masculinity, the home and ultimately fatherhoo
Twenty years ago, historian John Demos (1982) made the now widely cited point that “fatherhood has a...
In this chapter, stories of shame, anger and resistance are used to explore the tensions surrounding...
Within two generations, the primary reason that American children were deprived of a father shifted ...
The majority of historiography and literature regarding the American Revolution has a heavy focus on...
This study is a social and cultural history of fatherhood in New England and the Midwest from the ea...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 88-95)To men of early modern England, few things mattered...