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Writing Early American Lives: Gender, Race, Nation, Faith

21L.707 · Literature · Undergraduate · Fall 2005

Prof. Mary Fuller

MIT · Tier 1

This course focuses on the period between roughly 1550-1850. American ideas of race had taken on a certain shape by the middle of the nineteenth century, consolidated by legislation, economics, and the institution of chattel slavery. But both race and identity meant very different things three hundred years earlier, both in their dictionary definitions and in their social consequences. How did people constitute their identities in early America, and how did they speak about these identities? Te…

LiteratureGender StudiesSociologyHumanitiesSocial Sciences

The syllabus, on MIT OpenCourseWare

The full course — syllabus, assigned readings, problem sets, exams, and lecture notes — lives on OCW. These open the real thing:

Attribution

Prof. Mary Fuller. 21L.707 Writing Early American Lives: Gender, Race, Nation, Faith. Fall 2005. Massachusetts Institute of Technology: MIT OpenCourseWare, https://ocw.mit.edu. License: CC BY-NC-SA 4.0.

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