This volume represents one of the first efforts to harvest the
rapidly emerging scholarship in the field of American rural
history. Building on the insights and methodologies that social
historians have directed toward urban life, the contributors
explore the past as it unfolded in the rural settings in which most
Americans have lived during most of American history.
The essays cover a broad range of topics: the character and
consequences of manufacturing and consumerism in the antebellum
countryside of the Northeast; the transition from slavery to
freedom in Southern plantation and nonplantation regions; the
dynamics of community-building and inheritance among Midwestern
native and immigrant farmers; the panorama of rural labor systems
in the Far West; and the experience of settled farming communities
in periods of slowed economic growth. The central theme is the
complex and often conflicting development of commercial and
industrial capitalism in the American countryside. Together the
essays place rural societies within the context of America's "Great
Transformation."