Using 1776
In the Wake of Jim Crow
Sing America!
Alive with the Sound of Music
Dancing through American History
An Arrow Against Profane and Promiscuous Dancing
“Let’s mingle our feelings”: Gender and Collectivity in the Music of the Shaker West
How Americans Learned to Listen
The Sound and Look of Time: Bells and Clocks in Philadelphia
The Sound of Violence: Music of King Philip’s War and Memories of Settler Colonialism in the American Northeast
Meeting, Merriment, and Massacre: Musical Encounters between Kikotans and English, 1607-1610
The Orchestra as Social Utopia
The Difference in Musical Nationalism
The Canon between Arts and Nations
A Note on Early American Music Studies: Introduction to Common-place 13:2
Dixie Land Songster
Musical Sleuthing in Early America
Where’s Wesley?
French Revolutionary Song for Federal Philadelphia
Populism! Yeah? Yeah!!
Performing Early American Fiddle Tunes
Partners in Time
Unrecouped
Rigdon McCoy McIntosh and the Tabor
Mozart in America
Ritualization and Early American Music: Introduction to Common-place 13:2
Norumbega Harmony and the New England Singing School Tradition
Hesperus and Colonial American music
Listening to the Evidence of the African American Slave Experience
Cotton Mather to Edmund Ruffin, the Musical Journey
Reviving the Folk Revival
Don’t Mess with Us, Texas
The Newberry Consort
In Search of American Music: Introduction to Common-place 13:2
Publick Occurrences 2.0 October 2008
Tunebook: David and Ginger Hildebrand
Rocking the Colonial Period
Music and Meaning In Early America: Resources for Further Reading and Listening
Hearing Slavery: Recovering the role of sound in African American slave culture
Dancing across the Color Line
Searching for Florence
Salem Musick
Supernatural Sounds and Enlightenment Silence
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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If you are looking for a specific Commonplace article from the back catalog and do not see it, or if have any other questions, please contact us directly. Please follow us on Twitter @Commonplacejrnl or Facebook @commonplacejournal and thank you for your support.