𝔖 Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

πŸ“

Love and the Working Class: The Inner Worlds of Nineteenth Century Americans

✍ Scribed by Karen Lystra


Publisher
Oxford University Press
Year
2024
Tongue
English
Leaves
360
Category
Library

⬇  Acquire This Volume

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


Love and the Working Class is a unique look at the emotions of hard-living, nineteenth-century Americans who were often on the cusp of literacy. These laboring folk highly valued letters and, however difficult it was, wrote to stay connected to those they loved. This book displays the personal expression of factory hands, manual laborers, peddlers, coopers, carpenters, lumbermen, miners, tanners, haulers, tailors, seamstresses, laundresses, domestics, sharecroppers, independent farmers, and common soldiers and their wives. Entering the β€œanonymous corners” of these people's lives through letters, we can see their humor, grit, hope, heartache, and endurance, and grasp what they believed and felt about themselves, their kinfolk, and their friends.

As much as possible, these working-class Americans living in the nineteenth century speak to contemporary readers in their own words. Often armed with only a third or fourth grade education, they could read but had limited instruction in writing. Yet they sat down to compose a letter, often spurred by a range of experience including the Gold Rush, westward expansion, slavery, the Emancipation Proclamation, and what was arguably the most important event in nineteenth-century America, the Civil War. During the war, poor, undereducated soldiers and their families wrote letters in a quantity never before seen in American history.

Using letters written to parents, siblings, husbands, wives, friends, and potential mates between 1830 and 1880, Karen Lystra identifies the shared conceptions of love and practices of courtship and marriage within a racially diverse population of free working-class people born in America. Readers can listen to their voices as they flirt, act as intermediaries in hometown courtships, express non-romantic love to their mates, tease each other, and voice their hopes for the future. Through these personal letters, poor, minimally schooled Americans show us how they felt about love and how they created meaningful attachments in their uncertain lives.


πŸ“œ SIMILAR VOLUMES


Love and the Working Class: The Inner Wo
✍ Karen Lystra πŸ“‚ Library πŸ“… 2024 πŸ› Oxford University Press 🌐 English

<span>Love and the Working Class </span><span>is a unique look at the emotions of hard-living, nineteenth-century Americans who were often on the cusp of literacy. These laboring folk highly valued letters and, however difficult it was, wrote to stay connected to those they loved. This book displays

Fighting Words: Working-Class Formation,
✍ Marc W. Steinberg πŸ“‚ Library πŸ“… 2018 πŸ› Cornell University Press 🌐 English

<p>A key component of social life, discourse mediates the processes of class formation and social conflict. Drawing on dialogic theory and building on the work of E. P. Thompson, Marc W. Steinberg argues for the importance of incorporating discursive analysis into the historical reconstruction of cl

Factory Lives: Four Nineteenth-Century W
✍ James R. Simmons, Jr. πŸ“‚ Library πŸ“… 2007 πŸ› Broadview Press 🌐 English

<p> <em>Factory Lives</em> contains four works of great importance in the field of nineteenth-century working-class autobiography: John Brown’s <em>A Memoir of Robert Blincoe</em>; William Dodd’s <em>A Narrative of the Experience and Sufferings of William Dodd</em>; Ellen Johnston’s β€œAutobiography”;

Drink, Temperance and the Working Class
✍ James S. Roberts πŸ“‚ Library πŸ“… 2021 πŸ› Routledge 🌐 English

<p><span>Originally published in 1984 this book provided the first German case study of a prototypical 19th Century social problem, combining a discussion of popular drinking behaviour with analysis of efforts to reform it on the parts of both middle class temperance reformers and the socialist labo