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Women and Marriage

Women and Marriage.

Prompt: The book Middletown was an in-depth study of social change and continuity in American life. The authors, Robert and Helen Lynd, and their team of researchers used their questioning and analysis of the people of Muncie, Indiana (the basis for the fictional “Middletown”) to describe how American communities had transformed between 1890 and 1925, and what further changes might be expected in the future. As the size of the book demonstrates, these changes aren’t easily summarized, and it is broken down into several categories. Rather than trying to deal with the entire book, then, I want you to focus on a single category, one of the following: -women and marriage -the working class -the “business class” -child-raising -leisure time -religion -community activity For the group/activity you select, describe what seem to be the essential changes it experienced between 1890 and 1925. What changed? What was responsible for these changes? As before, I’m not looking for a single “right” answer here. What I do want to see is a thoughtful, reasonable response expressed in an organized manner (introduction, multiple supporting arguments and evidence, conclusion). Requirements: Papers must be 1500-2000 words in length (approximately 4-6 pages), submitted to the course website no later than 11:55 p.m. on Sunday, November 17. You may draw on any number of sources in making your argument, including but not limited to: our textbook, books and articles from Kent Library, and reputable online sources. Whatever sources you choose, make sure to cite them with footnotes or endnotes and a “Works Cited” page. (Caution: Be careful about the use of online sources; the Internet being the Internet, some webpages claiming to be historically accurate will be nothing of the sort. Search for sites that are scholarly, well-documented, or both.)

Women and Marriage