American Holidays, A Natural History
This dissertation examines the production and consumption of nature in middle-class American holidays. Focusing on the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, it follows the creation of new symbols and practices associated with Easter, the Fourth of July, Thanksgiving and Christmas. In each of these h...
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ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-2049102015-10-23T04:48:49Z American Holidays, A Natural History Prendergast, Neil Morrissey, Katherine Weiner, Douglas Irvin, Benjamin Robbins, Paul Morrissey, Katherine middle class nature production History consumption holidays This dissertation examines the production and consumption of nature in middle-class American holidays. Focusing on the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, it follows the creation of new symbols and practices associated with Easter, the Fourth of July, Thanksgiving and Christmas. In each of these holidays, members of the middle class used nature to narrate their new identity as Americans belonging less to local, regional, or ethnic communities and more to the nuclear family and the nation. In Thanksgiving, the turkey became an important symbol in the antebellum era, the same period in which the Easter rabbit was born, the Fourth of July picnic became popular, and the Christmas tree rose to prominence. These trends resulted from the middle-class desire to make the home an idealized private life complete with its own rituals and symbols that separated it from the public life of the street. While the middle class retreated into its imagined private sphere, it did so while simultaneously claiming that their families represented the core building blocks of the nation. By conflating family and nation, the middle class generated a large demand for the physical goods that made such symbolic meaning manifest--in particular, Thanksgiving turkeys and Christmas trees. Reproducing these plants and animals, however, created agroecological problems, including crop diseases. While middle-class family holidays reinforce the scales of popular culture and mass agriculture, they do so only tenuously. 2011 text Electronic Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/10150/204910 en Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. The University of Arizona. |
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en |
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middle class nature production History consumption holidays |
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middle class nature production History consumption holidays Prendergast, Neil American Holidays, A Natural History |
description |
This dissertation examines the production and consumption of nature in middle-class American holidays. Focusing on the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, it follows the creation of new symbols and practices associated with Easter, the Fourth of July, Thanksgiving and Christmas. In each of these holidays, members of the middle class used nature to narrate their new identity as Americans belonging less to local, regional, or ethnic communities and more to the nuclear family and the nation. In Thanksgiving, the turkey became an important symbol in the antebellum era, the same period in which the Easter rabbit was born, the Fourth of July picnic became popular, and the Christmas tree rose to prominence. These trends resulted from the middle-class desire to make the home an idealized private life complete with its own rituals and symbols that separated it from the public life of the street. While the middle class retreated into its imagined private sphere, it did so while simultaneously claiming that their families represented the core building blocks of the nation. By conflating family and nation, the middle class generated a large demand for the physical goods that made such symbolic meaning manifest--in particular, Thanksgiving turkeys and Christmas trees. Reproducing these plants and animals, however, created agroecological problems, including crop diseases. While middle-class family holidays reinforce the scales of popular culture and mass agriculture, they do so only tenuously. |
author2 |
Morrissey, Katherine |
author_facet |
Morrissey, Katherine Prendergast, Neil |
author |
Prendergast, Neil |
author_sort |
Prendergast, Neil |
title |
American Holidays, A Natural History |
title_short |
American Holidays, A Natural History |
title_full |
American Holidays, A Natural History |
title_fullStr |
American Holidays, A Natural History |
title_full_unstemmed |
American Holidays, A Natural History |
title_sort |
american holidays, a natural history |
publisher |
The University of Arizona. |
publishDate |
2011 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10150/204910 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT prendergastneil americanholidaysanaturalhistory |
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1718100437605810176 |