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Conflict on the Michigan Frontier - Yankee and Borderland Cultures, 1815-1840 (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R579
Discovery Miles 5 790
You Save: R115
(17%)
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Conflict on the Michigan Frontier - Yankee and Borderland Cultures, 1815-1840 (Hardcover)
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List price R694
Loot Price R579
Discovery Miles 5 790
You Save R115 (17%)
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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In the early nineteenth century, the pioneers who came from New
England to the Northwest Territory envisioned themselves taming the
wilderness. As they cleared the forests for their crops and
livestock, these settlers also sought to transform the social
landscape for the cultivation of their own moral values, political
beliefs, and cultural institutions. Using Michigan as a case study,
James Schwartz explains how settlers employed both legal tactics
and moral suasion to impose their vision of a civilized society.
Yankees were concerned not only with the barbarism of the Native
Americans in Michigan but also with the savagery of the territory's
white inhabitants who violated the norms of genteel society.
Michigan leaders sought to eliminate this compound threat by
establishing two kinds of boundaries-formal legal barriers and
informal restraints. Combining these elements of civic culture
allowed settlers to enact laws while also placing emphasis on
families, schools, community groups, and print culture to
reestablish social norms in a new environment. The elected
legislature passed anti-vice laws to control drunks and gamblers
while it debated ways in which to curb unscrupulous speculators and
avaricious bankers. Meanwhile crusaders advocated religious
instruction and education to civilize the state's youth. Conflict
on the Michigan Frontier touches on one of the oldest debates in
American history: whether westerners created new cultures or simply
transplanted those in which they had been raised. Schwartz
concludes that, while efforts to transform the physical and social
landscape of the Northwest Territory generally succeeded,
Michigan's settlers blended New England and the frontier,
establishing a landscape that resembled, but was not identical to,
that of the East. Despite the focus on Michigan, Schwartz's study
sheds important new light on how settlers transplanted eastern
culture not just to the Midwest, but to the entire American
frontier.
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