Tomeki
Cover of Our common country

Our common country

family farming, culture, and community in the nineteenth-century Midwest

By Rugh, Susan Sessions.

0 (0 Ratings)
0 Want to read0 Currently reading0 Have read

Publish Date

2001

Publisher

Indiana University Press

Language

eng

Pages

285

Description:

"Agrarian ideology flourished in the nineteenth-century Midwest, where countless settler families carved homesteads out of the prairie and nurtured ideals that we consider distinctively American - independence, democracy, community, piety. Our Common Country explains the making of the family farm culture in the heartland by telling the story of families in rural Fountain Green, Illinois, from settlement to century's end. A richly textured social history narrative of people the reader will come to know, the book examines three themes: changing cultural identities, the expansion of the market, and the adoption of class-based gender ideologies. It features a major political conflict at each stage of market expansion - the Mormon troubles, the Civil War, and the Grange protest - to highlight the transformations that took place."--BOOK JACKET.