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Industrious in Their Stations: Young People at Work in Urban America, 1720-1810
Hardback

Industrious in Their Stations: Young People at Work in Urban America, 1720-1810

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Industrious in Their Stations is the first comparative study of child labor in eighteenth-century America. Focusing on Philadelphia, Boston, and Charleston, Sundue examines the work experiences of children and analyzes regional differences in child labor according to gender, race, and class.During the eighteenth century, work was central to the lives of most young people. Work skills, learned young, were regarded as the crux of a useful education, heralded as a preventative against idleness and sin, and as representing a vital contribution to the economy. By century’s end, however, the
diffusion of knowledge
to all white citizens was being described by many political thinkers as critical to securing the new republic, and more formal education had gained popularity.But this expansion of schooling opportunities did not affect all groups of children equally. Sundue argues that controlling access to education, both academic and vocational, was an essential mechanism for controlling the potentially unruly poor. By comparing regional elite efforts to afford the young poor both vocational and formal academic education, Sundue offers a nuanced, complicated picture of how inequality was constructed both prior to and after the American Revolution, highlighting its disparate impact on class, race, and gender in late eighteenth-century America.

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MORE INFO
Format
Hardback
Publisher
University of Virginia Press
Country
United States
Date
1 April 2009
Pages
320
ISBN
9780813927138

Industrious in Their Stations is the first comparative study of child labor in eighteenth-century America. Focusing on Philadelphia, Boston, and Charleston, Sundue examines the work experiences of children and analyzes regional differences in child labor according to gender, race, and class.During the eighteenth century, work was central to the lives of most young people. Work skills, learned young, were regarded as the crux of a useful education, heralded as a preventative against idleness and sin, and as representing a vital contribution to the economy. By century’s end, however, the
diffusion of knowledge
to all white citizens was being described by many political thinkers as critical to securing the new republic, and more formal education had gained popularity.But this expansion of schooling opportunities did not affect all groups of children equally. Sundue argues that controlling access to education, both academic and vocational, was an essential mechanism for controlling the potentially unruly poor. By comparing regional elite efforts to afford the young poor both vocational and formal academic education, Sundue offers a nuanced, complicated picture of how inequality was constructed both prior to and after the American Revolution, highlighting its disparate impact on class, race, and gender in late eighteenth-century America.

Read More
Format
Hardback
Publisher
University of Virginia Press
Country
United States
Date
1 April 2009
Pages
320
ISBN
9780813927138