The American Woman's HomeThe American Womans Home, originally published in 1869, was one of the late nineteenth centurys most important handbooks of domestic advice. The result of a collaboration by two of the eras most important writers, this book represents their attempt to direct womens acquisition and use of a dizzying variety of new household consumer goods available in the postCivil War economic boom. It updates Catharine Beechers influential Treatise on Domestic Economy (1841) and incorporates domestic writings by Harriet Beecher Stowe first published in The Atlantic in the 1860s. Today, the book can be likened to an anthology of household hints, with articles on cooking, decorating, housekeeping, child-rearing, hygiene, gardening, etiquette, and home amusements. The American Womans Home, almost a bible on domestic topics for Victorian women, illuminates womens roles a century and a half ago and can be used for comparison with modern theories on the role of women in the home and in society. Illustrated with the original engravings, this completely new edition offers a lively introduction by Nicole Tonkovich and notes linking the text to important historical, social, and cultural events of the late nineteenth century |
From inside the book
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... lady . " Such an educated lady understands the science of " aerating bread , " following standard procedures that derive from her knowledge of chemistry . Here , however , domesticity's contradictions become apparent , for this lady ...
... Ladies at Home and at School ( 1841 ) . Like its successor , The American Woman's Home , the Treatise was a domestic encyclopedia that propounded a philosophically and scientifically based system of household management and practice ...
... ladies , the short - lived Western Female Institute , with Harriet as her associate principal . Here Harriet published her first book , Primary Geography for Chil- dren ( 1833 ) , which she had written for Hartford Female Seminary ...
... practice and informed womanhood . These are the " Christian ladies " that The American Woman's Home's final chapters address . Some will marry and fulfill the " noble mission " of bearing and rearing children ; others will xx Introduction.
... Lady Book , the leading women's magazine of the day . Still other postwar commodities eliminated such tasks altogether : One need no longer build one's own furniture , raise and butcher one's own meat , preserve one's food , churn one's ...
Contents
VII | 23 |
VIII | 27 |
IX | 42 |
X | 53 |
XI | 58 |
XII | 71 |
XIII | 85 |
XIV | 91 |
XXVI | 197 |
XXVII | 205 |
XXVIII | 214 |
XXIX | 225 |
XXX | 228 |
XXXI | 247 |
XXXII | 256 |
XXXIII | 260 |
XV | 95 |
XVI | 108 |
XVII | 116 |
XVIII | 122 |
XIX | 129 |
XX | 146 |
XXI | 151 |
XXII | 162 |
XXIII | 167 |
XXIV | 176 |
XXV | 185 |
XXXIV | 265 |
XXXV | 270 |
XXXVI | 278 |
XXXVII | 282 |
XXXVIII | 286 |
XXXIX | 289 |
XL | 296 |
XLI | 308 |
XLII | 318 |
XLIII | 333 |