Gaps in the Record: Teaching with the Constitutional Convention
How to Read a Book: The X-Ray Method for Achieving a Sustainable “Book-Life Balance”
The Peculiar Game of the Yankee Peddler—Or what do you buy?
“Nativity Gives Citizenship”: Teaching Antislavery Constitutionalism through the Black Convention Movement
Uncle Tom’s Cabin, The Jigsaw Puzzle: Jumbling the Pieces of Stowe’s Story
William & Mary’s Nottoway Quarter: The Political Economy of Institutional Slavery and Settler Colonialism
Loosening the Tongue: Language Learning among Early American Missionaries to the Ottoman Empire
A Minister’s Desk? Reanimating Space, Rethinking Furniture
Can We Scan the Piggin?: Revisiting Early American Material Culture and Campus Collections across Pandemic Time
“A Very Curious Religious Game”: Spiritual Maps and Material Culture in Early America
New Seats at the Tea Party
Frances Ellen Watkins Harper, Media Theorist
A Class Kids Love to Hate
The Myth of Universal Education
Cosmic Kinship: John Stewart’s “Sensate Matter” in the Early Republic
Sing America!
Dancing through American History
And Then There Were Three: A New Generation of Scholarship in Deaf History
Closing the Books
Publick Occurrences 2.0 April 2008
Exhibiting Excellence
Overboard
The National History Education Clearinghouse
Instructions for the Young: Nineteenth-Century Schoolbooks
Beyond the Bubble
From Hondas to Civics
The Female Reader as Civic Actor
Opening the Academy Theodore R. Sizer, 1932-2009
Blogging, with Pickles: Adventures (and misadventures) in the quest to capture the flavor of everyday school life
History Wars, Then and Now: The Politics of Unity in American History Textbooks before the Civil War
Don’t Mess with Us, Texas
Literacy Then and Now
National Endowment’s Summer Vacation
Creative Writing
Reviews
ABOUT
Welcome to Commonplace, a destination for exploring and exchanging ideas about early American history and culture. A bit less formal than a scholarly journal, a bit more scholarly than a popular magazine, Commonplace speaks—and listens—to scholars, museum curators, teachers, hobbyists, and just about anyone interested in American history before 1900. It is for all sorts of people to read about all sorts of things relating to early American life—from architecture to literature, from politics to parlor manners. It’s a place to find insightful analysis of early American history as it is discussed in scholarly literature, as it manifests on the evening news, as it is curated in museums, big and small; as it is performed in documentary and dramatic films and as it shows up in everyday life.
In addition to critical evaluations of books and websites (Reviews) and poetic research and fiction (Creative Writing), our articles explore material and visual culture (Objects); pedagogy, the writing of literary scholarship, and the historian’s craft (Teach); and diverse aspects of America’s past and its many peoples (Learn). For more great content, check out our other projects, (Just Teach One) and (Just Teach One African American Print).
How to cite Commonplace articles:
Author, “Title of Article,” Commonplace: the journal of early American life, date accessed, URL.
Sophie White, “Trading Looks Race, Religion and Dress in French America,” Commonplace: the journal of early American life, accessed September 30, 2019, https://commonplace.online/article/trading-looks-race-religion-dress-french-america/
Joshua R. Greenberg, editor
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