Cyndi's List

Cyndi's List

Author: Cyndi Howells

Publisher: Genealogical Publishing Com

Published: 2001

Total Pages: 866

ISBN-13: 9780806316789

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A two volume set which provides researchers with more than 70,000 links to every conceivable genealogical resource on the Internet.


Family Fare

Family Fare

Author: Public Library of Fort Wayne and Allen County. Reynolds Historical Genealogy Department

Publisher:

Published: 1975

Total Pages: 590

ISBN-13:

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Age in America

Age in America

Author: Corinne T. Field

Publisher: NYU Press

Published: 2015-05-22

Total Pages: 346

ISBN-13: 1479870013

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Eighteen. Twenty-one. Sixty-five. In America today, we recognize these numbers as key transitions in our lives—precise moments when our rights and opportunities change—when we become eligible to cast a vote, buy a drink, or enroll in Medicare. This volume brings together scholars of childhood, adulthood, and old age to explore how and why particular ages have come to define the rights and obligations of American citizens. Since the founding of the nation, Americans have relied on chronological age to determine matters as diverse as who can marry, work, be enslaved, drive a car, or qualify for a pension. Contributors to this volume explore what meanings people in the past ascribed to specific ages and whether or not earlier Americans believed the same things about particular ages as we do. The means by which Americans imposed chronological boundaries upon the variable process of growing up and growing old offers a paradigmatic example of how people construct cultural meaning and social hierarchy from embodied experience. Further, chronological age always intersects with other socially constructed categories such as gender, race, and sexuality. Ranging from the seventeenth century to the present, taking up a variety of distinct subcultures—from frontier children and antebellum slaves to twentieth-century Latinas—Age in America makes a powerful case that age has always been a key index of citizenship.


Books and Religious Devotion

Books and Religious Devotion

Author: Allan F. Westphall

Publisher: Penn State Press

Published: 2015-02-05

Total Pages: 247

ISBN-13: 0271065109

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In Books and Religious Devotion, Allan Westphall presents a study of the book-collecting habits and annotation practices of Thomas Connary, an Irish immigrant farmer who lived in New Hampshire in the latter half of the nineteenth century. Connary led a pious life that revolved around the use, annotation, and sharing of religious books. His surviving annotated volumes provide a revealing glimpse into the utility of books for a common reader—and they show how one remarkable, eccentric reader turned religious books into near icons. Through a careful excavation of book adaptations and enhancements, Westphall gives us insight into the range of opportunities provided by the material book for recording and communicating Connary's religious fervor. The study also investigates the broader nineteenth-century cultural setting, in which books are seen as testimonies of personal faith and come to function as instruments of social interaction in both domestic and public spheres. Underlying Connary’s many and varied interactions with books is his belief that working in books, as physical objects, can be a devout exercise instrumental in human salvation.