The Middle-Class City The Middle-Class City

The Middle-Class City

Transforming Space and Time in Philadelphia, 1876-1926

    • £55.99
    • £55.99

Publisher Description

The classic historical interpretation of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries in America sees this period as a political search for order by the middle class, culminating in Progressive Era reforms. In The Middle-Class City, John Hepp examines transformations in everyday middle-class life in Philadelphia between 1876 and 1926 to discover the cultural roots of this search for order. By looking at complex relationships among members of that city's middle class and three largely bourgeois commercial institutions—newspapers, department stores, and railroads—Hepp finds that the men and women of the middle class consistently reordered their world along rational lines.

According to Hepp, this period was rife with evidence of creative reorganization that served to mold middle-class life. The department store was more than just an expanded dry goods emporium; it was a middle-class haven of order in the heart of a frenetic city—an entirely new way of organizing merchandise for sale. Redesigned newspapers brought well-ordered news and entertainment to middle-class homes and also carried retail advertisements to entice consumers downtown via train and streetcar. The complex interiors of urban railroad stations reflected a rationalization of space, and rail schedules embodied the modernized specialization of standard time. In his fascinating investigation of similar patterns of behavior among commercial institutions, Hepp exposes an important intersection between the histories of the city and the middle class.

In his careful reconstruction of this now vanished culture, Hepp examines a wide variety of sources, including diaries and memoirs left by middle-class women and men of the region. Following Philadelphians as they rode trains and trolleys, read newspapers, and shopped at department stores, he uses their accounts as individualized guidebooks to middle-class life in the metropolis. And through a creative use of photographs, floor plans, maps, and material culture, The Middle-Class City helps to reconstruct the physical settings of these enterprises and recreate everyday middle-class life, shedding new light on an underanalyzed historical group and the cultural history of twentieth-century America.

GENRE
History
RELEASED
2018
29 June
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
288
Pages
PUBLISHER
University of Pennsylvania Press, Inc.
SIZE
27.2
MB

More Books Like This

Public Markets and Civic Culture in Nineteenth-Century America Public Markets and Civic Culture in Nineteenth-Century America
2020
How New York Became American, 1890–1924 How New York Became American, 1890–1924
2020
Suburbanizing the Masses Suburbanizing the Masses
2017
First City First City
2013
Transport and Its Place in History Transport and Its Place in History
2020
Foundations Foundations
2020