

An edition of The lyceum and public culture in the nineteenth-century United States (2005)
By Angela G. Ray
Publish Date
2005
Publisher
Michigan State University Press
Language
eng
Pages
371
Description:
This book offers a narrative history of the lyceum in the United States from 1826 to about 1880. It focuses particularly on the development of the lecture circuits of the mid-nineteenth century, and it highlights the ways that social reformers adapted their reformist messages for a commercial medium and a popular audience. In addition to a historical summary, the book offers four in-depth case studies of different moments in lyceum history: the publication of Josiah Holbrook's Boston-based periodical *Family Lyceum* in the 1830s; the sponsorship of public lecture courses by a young men's lyceum in Milwaukee in the mid-1850s; the development of Anna Dickinson's major lecture of 1869-70, "Whited Sepulchres"; and the lyceum lecturing of Frederick Douglass, particularly after the Civil War. In appendixes, the book also provides two lecture texts by Dickinson and Douglass that have never before been published. This book can be described as cultural history, history of communication, and rhetorical analysis.
subjects: African American history, American history, History, Lectures and lecturing, Lyceums, Popular culture, lecture circuit, lyceum, nineteenth century, public culture, rhetoric, social reform, women's history, women's rights
People: Anna E. Dickinson, Frederick Douglass, James Redpath, Jerome Ripley Brigham, Josiah Holbrook, Samuel Dexter Ward
Places: Boston, Chicago, Milwaukee, New York, Philadelphia, Salt Lake City, United States
Times: 1826-1880, 19th century, nineteenth century