Cover for HINER: Growing Up in America: Children in Historical Perspective. Click for larger image

Growing Up in America

Children in Historical Perspective

Growing Up in America offers substantial and dramatic evidence that the history of childhood has come of age. Its authors demonstrate the breadth and depth of interest, as well as high quality of work, in a field that is finally attracting the attention it deserves. Strongly influenced by new social history and its concern for the powerless and inarticulate, Growing Up in America provides illuminating insights on children from infancy to adolescence and from the colonial period to present.

"The very title of this fine and enormously instructive anthology of essays makes its quiet but important point---that children grow up in a particular nation, rather than in a family or home isolated from the influence of social, cultural, political, and historical forces. . . . An admirably diverse and instructive collection."
-- Georgia Historical Quarterly

Related Titles

previous book next book
Political Writings

Simone de Beauvoir

Rebels and Runaways

Slave Resistance in Nineteenth-Century Florida

Larry Eugene Rivers

The Black Chicago Renaissance

Edited by Darlene Clark Hine and John McCluskey Jr.

Ghost of the Ozarks

Murder and Memory in the Upland South

Brooks Blevins

Pacific Citizens

Larry and Guyo Tajiri and Japanese American Journalism in the World War II Era

Edited, with an Introduction and Notes, by Greg Robinson

The 1933 Chicago World's Fair

A Century of Progress

Cheryl R. Ganz

African or American?

Black Identity and Political Activism in New York City, 1784-1861

Leslie M. Alexander

A New Language, A New World

Italian Immigrants in the United States, 1890-1945

Nancy C. Carnevale

Obama, Clinton, Palin

Making History in Election 2008

Edited by Liette Gidlow

The War of 1812

A Forgotten Conflict

Donald R. Hickey