
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
About this book
Cowinner, 2008 Fred Kniffen Book Award. Pioneer America Society/Association for the Preservation of Landscapes and Artifacts
How did people living on the early American frontier discover and then become a part of the market economy? How do their purchases and their choices revise our understanding of the market revolution and the emerging consumer ethos? Ann Smart Martin provides answers to these questions by examining the texture of trade on the edge of the upper Shenandoah Valley between 1760 and 1810.
Reconstructing the world of one country merchant, John Hook, Martin reveals how the acquisition of consumer goods created and validated a set of ideas about taste, fashion, and lifestyle in a particular place at a particular time. Her analysis of Hook's account ledger illuminates the everyday wants, transactions, and tensions recorded within and brings some of Hook's customers to life: a planter looking for just the right clock, a farmer in search of nails, a young woman and her friends out shopping on their own, and a slave woman choosing a looking glass.
This innovative approach melds fascinating narratives with sophisticated analysis of material culture to distill large abstract social and economic systems into intimate triangulations among merchants, customers, and objects. Martin finds that objects not only reflect culture, they are the means to create it.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover Page
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Contents
- Series Editor’s Foreword
- Preface
- Introduction
- One The Business of Revolutions: John Hook and the Atlantic World
- Two Getting the Goods: Local Acquisition in a Tobacco Economy
- Three Accounting for Life: Objects, Names, and Numbers
- Four Living the Backcountry: Styles and Standards
- Five Setting the Stage, Playing the Part: Stores as Shopping Spaces
- Six Suckey’s Looking Glass: African Americans as Consumers
- Epilogue
- Notes
- Essay on Sources
- Index