Making Home Work: Domesticity and Native American Assimilation in the American West, 1860-1919

Making Home Work: Domesticity and Native American Assimilation in the American West, 1860-1919

by Jane E. Simonsen
Making Home Work: Domesticity and Native American Assimilation in the American West, 1860-1919

Making Home Work: Domesticity and Native American Assimilation in the American West, 1860-1919

by Jane E. Simonsen

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Overview

During the westward expansion of America, white middle-class ideals of home and domestic work were used to measure differences between white and Native American women. Yet the vision of America as "home" was more than a metaphor for women's stake in the process of conquest--it took deliberate work to create and uphold. Treating white and indigenous women's struggles as part of the same history, Jane E. Simonsen argues that as both cultural workers and domestic laborers insisted upon the value of their work to "civilization," they exposed the inequalities integral to both the nation and the household.

Simonsen illuminates discussions about the value of women's work through analysis of texts and images created by writers, women's rights activists, reformers, anthropologists, photographers, field matrons, and Native American women. She argues that women such as Caroline Soule, Alice Fletcher, E. Jane Gay, Anna Dawson Wilde, and Angel DeCora called upon the rhetoric of sentimental domesticity, ethnographic science, public display, and indigenous knowledge as they sought to make the gendered and racial order of the nation visible through homes and the work performed in them. Focusing on the range of materials through which domesticity was produced in the West, Simonsen integrates new voices into the study of domesticity's imperial manifestations.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780807877265
Publisher: The University of North Carolina Press
Publication date: 12/08/2006
Series: Gender and American Culture
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 288
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Jane E. Simonsen is assistant professor of history and gender/women's studies at Augustana College.

Table of Contents


Acknowledgments     xi
Introduction: Squaring the Circle     1
Prairie Heirs and Heiresses: Native American History and the Future of the West in Caroline Soule's The Pet of the Settlement     17
The House Divided: Class and Race in the Married Woman's Home     43
Object Lessons: Domesticity on Display in Native American Assimilation     71
The Cook, the Photographer, and Her Majesty, the Allotting Agent: Unsettling Domesticity in E. Jane Gay's Choup-nit-ki     111
A Model of Its Kind: Anna Dawson Wilde's Home in the Field     151
Border Designs: Domestic Production and Cultural Survival     183
Postscript: The Map and the Territory     215
Notes     223
Bibliography     243
Index     261

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

This is a wonderful contribution to scholarship that integrates Native content and experiences into American history in order to enrich and expand our understandings of American colonial and cultural development.—K. Tsianina Lomawaima, University of Arizona

Gracefully written, imaginatively conceived, impressively researched, and interdisciplinary to its core, this book promises to significantly enhance our understanding of the home as a site for cultural work as well as a place of domestic labor.—Eileen Boris, University of California, Santa Barbara

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