How Depression-Era Quiltmakers Constructed Domestic Space: An Interracial Processual Study
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Date
2008
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Midwestern Folklore
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Abstract
In this article, I examine how quiltmaking contributed to the construction of home environments in the 1920s to 1940s. Drawing from oral history interviews with descendants of six black and two white quiltmakers, I argue that these low- and middle-income women enhanced their authority in the family and ordered domestic space through routine practices of making quilts primarily for everyday use. I posit the prominent spacetaking quality of quiltmaking as key to its effectiveness for these purposes. Thus emphasizing the process rather than product side of material culture studies, I argue that the capacity of quiltmaking to shape how inhabitants experience a household has been a significant factor in its long-term popularity in the United States.
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Quilts, material culture, African-American studies, vernacular Architecture
Citation
Klassen, Teri. "How Depression-Era Quiltmakers Constructed Domestic Space: An Interracial Processual Study." Midwestern Folklore 34.2 (2008): 17-47.
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