The Chautauqua Girls At Home
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Four Girls at Chautauqua
Author | : Isabella Macdonald Allen |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 488 |
Release | : 1904 |
Genre | : Camp meetings |
ISBN | : |
The Chautauqua Girls at Home
Author | : Isabella Macdonald Alden |
Publisher | : CreateSpace |
Total Pages | : 218 |
Release | : 2015-05-04 |
Genre | : |
ISBN | : 9781512034837 |
"The Chautauqua Girls At Home" from Isabella Macdonald Alden. American author, writing under the pseudonym of Pansy (1841-1930).
Chautauqua Summer
Author | : Rebecca Chace |
Publisher | : Houghton Mifflin Harcourt P |
Total Pages | : 216 |
Release | : 1993 |
Genre | : Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN | : |
At the turn of the century, Chautauqua meant the summer tent shows in the town of Chautauqua, New York. But for the past decade it has stood for the month-long summer tour of a band of vaudevillians, led by The Flying Karamazov Brothers, which travels to small towns in the American Northwest and over to Canada. A few summers ago, Rebecca Chace joined the Chautauqua as a trapeze artist, along with the Karamazovs; Artis the Spoonman; Magical Mystical Michael; The Girls Who Wear Glasses; folksinger Faith Petric; Toes Tiranoff; and many others, including the band and the children of various performers, who put together their own act. This is her story of that summer, and of her romance with Dmitri Karamazov.
The Chautauqua Moment
Author | : Andrew Chamberlin Rieser |
Publisher | : Columbia University Press |
Total Pages | : 417 |
Release | : 2003-11-05 |
Genre | : Religion |
ISBN | : 0231501137 |
This book traces the rise and decline of what Theodore Roosevelt once called the "most American thing in America." The Chautauqua movement began in 1874 on the shores of Chautauqua Lake in western New York. More than a college or a summer resort or a religious assembly, it was a composite of all of these—completely derivative yet brilliantly innovative. For five decades, Chautauqua dominated adult education and reached millions with its summer assemblies, reading clubs, and traveling circuits. Scholars have long struggled to make sense of Chautauqua's pervasive yet disorganized presence in American life. In this critical study, Andrew Rieser weaves the threads of Chautauqua into a single story and places it at the vital center of fin de siècle cultural and political history. Famous for its commitment to democracy, women's rights, and social justice, Chautauqua was nonetheless blind to issues of class and race. How could something that trumpeted democracy be so undemocratic in practice? The answer, Rieser argues, lies in the historical experience of the white, Protestant middle classes, who struggled to reconcile their parochial interests with radically new ideas about social progress and the state. The Chautauqua Moment brings color to a colorless demographic and spins a fascinating tale of modern liberalism's ambivalent but enduring cultural legacy.