Jane B. Donegan: “Hydropathic Highway to Health”. Women and Water-Cure in Antebellum America, New York, Westport, Connecticut and London, Greenwood Press, 1986, pp. xx, 229, illus., ISBN 0-313-23816-2, £35.00

1989 ◽  
pp. 200-201
Author(s):  
Marcus Alan Watson

The Lott House in Brooklyn, one of the few remaining Dutch colonial farmhouses in New York City, was a place of multiple and transforming identities in encounters between persons of Dutch, English, and African descent. At one time the family was among the largest slaveholders in Brooklyn, yet they may have become abolitionists and used their house as part of the Underground Railroad. This chapter looks at the Lott family in the first half of the nineteenth century and how they fashioned and adapted their identities within the changing environment of antebellum America, particularly in relation to the people of African descent whom they owned, employed, or otherwise encountered. Making use of the built environment and archival evidence, the author argues that identity formation for the Lotts was a troubled endeavor, made difficult by the contradictory and sometimes clashing facets of their ethnic, religious, and social identities.


1987 ◽  
Vol 92 (1) ◽  
pp. 206
Author(s):  
Judy Barrett Litoff ◽  
Jane B. Donegan

1983 ◽  
Vol 52 (1) ◽  
pp. 36-49 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carl J. Guarneri

In the early 1840s a wave of enthusiasm for the socialist theory of Charles Fourier swept through American reform circles. Excited utopians in New York, Boston, and elsewhere in the North divided their efforts between publicizing their version of Fourierism, called “Association,” and building model communities or “phalanxes” to illustrate it. While the history and sociology of their nearly three dozen short-lived communal experiments continue to attract scholarly attention, the Associationists' writings have been relatively neglected. Yet the expositions and arguments that won thousands of converts to Fourierism represent an innovation in American religious thought too important to be forgotten: the first extensive attempt to harness the powerful ideas and symbols of Christianity to the emerging worldview of secular socialism.


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