Required readings
·
Web Page
·
M1 17th Century Colonial Life
Web Page
·
M1 18th Century Social and Economic Changes
Web Page
Web Page
Web Page
Textbook
· DuBois and Dumenil,
Through Women’s Eyes:
· Introduction for Students
· Chapters 1, 2 and 3.
· Lemisko, Lynn Speer.
“The Historical Imagination: Collingwood in the Classroom.”
Canadian Social Studies 38, no. 2 (December 1, 2004):
ERIC, EBSCO
host
Please use references from the required readings above
Assignment 1 –
1 ½ pages – Chicago Style references
Read carefully the sections in Through Women’s Eyes, “Primary Sources: European Images of Native American Women,” and “Primary Sources: Depictions of ‘Family’ in Colonial America”. Remember that these images were created by English and European men. Here is what I would like you to do:
Choose two of the images and discussions about them, and discuss the daily lives of the women in these pictures. Make sure the images you choose are of women of different ethnic and economic backgrounds.
What kinds of work did they do?
What were their family lives like?
How did they relate to the men in their cultures?
Discuss how the views and attitudes of the artists who created these images affected the ways women and children are portrayed in these pictures.
What assumptions did the artists make about Native American and slave women?
About the relationships of white women to their husbands and fathers?
Are those perceptions accurate?
Assignment 2
3 pages – Chicago style references
The goal of this Written Assignment is to learn a little about the practice of historical imagination. Historical Studies state that one of the basic competencies of Historical Studies is “an understanding of history as a creative art, a subjective discipline and an imaginative interpretation of the past.” Historical imagination, according to the 20th century historian and philosopher R.G. Collinwood, is a means by which scholars of history use imagination to reconstruct ideas, concepts, and narratives based on what is known about what really happened and what was thought. Historical imagination is not fiction. It must be localized to real places and it must be related to evidence gathered from historic sources.
For this module’s Written Assignment, review Lynn Lemisko’s
The Historical Imagination: Collingwood in the Classroom. Then please select one of the three options to write about.
Option #1: Role Swap
For this assignment, please examine the primary source documents in chapters 2-3 of Through Women’s Eyes. You will do a role-playing exercise about women in colonial families. As you know from your readings, there were at least three different kinds of families in Colonial America: Native American families, slave families and English/European families. In this assignment you:
Imagine a role-swap situation where one woman temporarily changes places with a woman from another kind of family. You may be a white colonial woman, a slave woman or a Native American woman. Be sure to explain your answers using the information from Through Women’s Eyes, as well as the Internet resources included in this module for sources.
In the first part of your essay, describe your daily life before the swap.
Where you live
What kind of family you have
How you relate to your husband, your children and your community.
In the second part of your essay, describe the changes that took place during the swap.
Start with the reasons for the swap. Don’t just assume that it happened.
How are the women in your new culture treated by the men in their families?
What new roles and expectations do you have?
How is your daily life different from the one you were accustomed to?
In the third part of your essay, describe the learning you took back to your own family after the swap.
What would you tell your family about your experience with the other culture?
Would your experiences change your attitudes and behavior towards that culture in any way?
Option #2: Domestic life in Early America
For this assignment, please examine the material in the Content Guides for this module as well as our text Through Women’s Eyes, particularly, The Letters and the Depictions of “Family” in Colonial America in the chapter 2 primary sources section. After you have done so:
Imagine yourself to be a woman of the 17th or 18th century tasked with the job of maintaining a household.
Write an essay detailing your responsibilities for one calendar year.
Include a household budget and a list of necessary food items.
Option #3: Analyzing historical documents
For this assignment, please examine the Content Guides for this module as well as the analysis offered by DuBois and Dumenil in their introductory comments on the challenges of documenting women’s history. After you have done so, please choose one of the M1 Optional Online Resources and:
Analyze how you would use the concept of historical imagination to craft a narrative about the materials presented [for example, on the Jamestown settlement, or on the Mayflower voyage, or on Martha Washington’s or Martha Ballard’s life]. Be sure to specify which M1 Optional Online Resources you have chosen to analyze.
Collingwood, R.G. “The Historical Imagination”, in The Idea of History. Oxford: Oxford University Press (1946), pp. 232-249.
Lemisko, Lynn Speer.
“The Historical Imagination: Collingwood in the Classroom.” Canadian Social Studies 38, no. 2 (December 1, 2004): ERIC, EB
Delivering a high-quality product at a reasonable price is not enough anymore.
That’s why we have developed 5 beneficial guarantees that will make your experience with our service enjoyable, easy, and safe.
You have to be 100% sure of the quality of your product to give a money-back guarantee. This describes us perfectly. Make sure that this guarantee is totally transparent.
Read moreEach paper is composed from scratch, according to your instructions. It is then checked by our plagiarism-detection software. There is no gap where plagiarism could squeeze in.
Read moreThanks to our free revisions, there is no way for you to be unsatisfied. We will work on your paper until you are completely happy with the result.
Read moreYour email is safe, as we store it according to international data protection rules. Your bank details are secure, as we use only reliable payment systems.
Read moreBy sending us your money, you buy the service we provide. Check out our terms and conditions if you prefer business talks to be laid out in official language.
Read more