America’s History Sixth Edition CHAPTER 11 Religion and Reform 1820–1860 Copyright © 2008 by...
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Transcript of America’s History Sixth Edition CHAPTER 11 Religion and Reform 1820–1860 Copyright © 2008 by...
America’s HistorySixth Edition
CHAPTER 11
Religion and Reform1820–1860
Copyright © 2008 by Bedford/St. Martin’s
Henretta • Brody • Dumenil
Individualism• Ralph Waldo Emerson and Transcendentalism• Emerson’s Literary Influence• Brook Farm
Rural Communalism andUrban Popular Culture
• Mother Ann Lee and the Shakers
• Arthur Brisbane and Fourierism
• John Humphrey Noyes and the Oneida Community
• Joseph Smith and the Mormon Experience
• Urban Popular Culture
Abolitionism• Black Social Thought: Uplift, Race Equality,
Rebellion• Evangelical Abolitionism• Opposition and Internal Conflict
The Women’s Rights Movement• Origins of the Women’s Movement• Abolitionist Women• The Program of Seneca Falls and Beyond
Chapter 11 Religion and Reform
1820–1860• Map 11.1 Major Communal Experiments Before 1860 (p. 336)
• Map 11.2 The Mormon Trek, 1830–1848 (p. 342)
• Map 11.3 The Underground Railroad in the 1850s (p. 353)
• Map 11.4 Women and Anti-Slavery, 1837–1838 (p. 357)
• Figure 11.1 Environment and Health: Average Height of Native-born Men, by Year of Birth 1710–1970 (p. 333)
• Figure 11.2 The Surge in Immigration, 1842–1855 (p. 347)
• “Pieties Quilt,” by Maria Cadman Hubbard, 1848 (p. 330)
• Bloomerism – An American Custom (p. 340)
• A Mormon Man and His Wives (p. 341)
• A Nineteenth Century Job Interview (p. 344)
• A Call for Revolution (p. 350)
• The Complexities of Race (p. 352)