Box 4
Contains 12 Results:
Paper: "Country Cornucopia: The Construction of Victorian Domestic Space", 1992
Paper. From the 1992 Winterthur Conference The American Home: Material Culture, Domestic Space, and Family Life (October 1992)
“James Wilson and the Village Enlightenment: Cartography and Culture in the Rural United States, 1790-1840”, 2003
Paper; research materials. From the Columbia University Seminar in Early American History (November 2003)
"Ruth Wright's Embroidered Terrestrial Globe, ca. 1815", May 2004
Workshop program. From the workshop object relations in early north america, sponsored by the Omohundro Institute of Early American Culture (May 2004)
Lecture: “Jacob Eichholtz: The changing world of artisan-artists in Post-Revolutionary America", Feb. 2004
Paper. From Lancaster County Historical Society
Talk: "Encountering New Netherlands: Dutch, English, African, and Native American Peoples", Oct. 2007
Schedule. Part of the American Social History Project program "Colonial New York" at Brooklyn Museum
"Seeing in the City: Broadway and the Culture of Vision in 19th Century New York" (Boston Immigration and Urban History Seminar), Feb. 2013
Paper. From the Boston Immigration and Urban History Seminar (Boston, February 2013)
Review Essay: "Things Chinese in the Making of Early America", 2013
Draft
“North America, 1600-1750” and “North America, 1750-1900”, c. 2011-2013
Chapter drafts (some with notations and comments); slide images. From History of Design, Decorative Arts and Material Culture, 1400-2000
Review Essay: “Beyond the Atlantic: Visual and Material Culture Studies of Early America”, 2014-2015
Offprints; drafts
"Country Cornucopia: The Construction of Victorian Domestic Space" (folder 1), c. 1983-1994
Includes various drafts, some annotated or with additional pages of comments from colleagues; rejection letter from American Quarterly for 1993/1994 submission with comments. Some of this material incorporated into later writings including "The Village Enlightenment in New England, 1760-1820", "Peddlers of Progress", and "A New Nation of Goods"