Acknowledgments
Prologue: A Box of Ideas
Introduction: Reason from Things
Chapter I: Windows and Ladders
Chapter II: Thinking with Things
Chapter III: Picture Lessons
Chapter IV: Object Lessons in Race and Citizenship
Chapter V: Objects and Ideas
Epilogue: Method over Matter in the Twenty-First Century
Classroom
Bibliographical Essay: Object Lessons in the Archives
Selected Bibliography
Notes
Index
Sarah Anne Carter is the curator and director of research at the Chipstone Foundation in Milwaukee. She has published, lectured, and taught courses on material culture, museum practice, and American cultural history. At Chipstone, Carter has collaboratively curated many innovative exhibitions, including Mrs. M. ---- 's Cabinet, and directs Chipstone's Think Tank Program in support of progressive curatorial practice.
"Blending intellectual and cultural history with material and
visual analysis, Sarah Anne Carter's Object Lessons: How
Nineteenth-Century Americans Learned to Make Sense of the Material
World reveals new perspectives on how American educators used
material knowledge to provide children with the language and
thinking skills needed to navigate the social turmoil of
industrialization, urbanization and race relations." -- P.J.
Carlino, Parsons School of
Design, Journal of Design History
"Moving between Europe and North America, [Carter's] work
concretizes abstract notions about the international circulation of
ideas and practices. As is proper for a book about object lessons,
its heart lies in the material: the volume boasts more than fifty
illustrations, almost half of them gorgeous colored plates... It is
an homage to the book's argument and subject matter to say that
this is a book worth acquiring even if just for the illustrations."
--
Karen Sánchez Eppler, Amherst College, Winterthur Portfolio
"This is a short, persuasive book important for education
historians and all historians interested in the turn to material
culture of the early twentieth century." -- Sally Gregory
Kohlstedt, University of Minnesota, American Historical Review
"Carter's work is most nuanced when it addresses the complications
of race, class, and gender in the conceptualizations and goals of
the "object lessons" and how their practitioners perceived their
efforts. When she teases out the intentionality underlying the
pedagogy of teaching with and through objects, Carter shows how
people can learn from objects and how this pedagogy was used in
past centuries to excite learning, generate deep thinking, and at
the same
time train the bodies and minds of those who learned through its
sensory approach." -- Diana B. Turk, New York University, Journal
of American History
"This short read is the result of ten years of work at noted
institutions consulting with skilled professionals. It contains 143
pages of text with the remaining 56 pages made up of an index, some
rich footnotes, and a large selected bibliography. The book is well
researched and documented" -- Debbie SchaeferJacobs, History of
Education Quarterly
"Carter's book is accessible, evovative, and engaging...[it]
contributes to the fields of American studies, American history,
and the history and foundations of American education." -- John H.
Bickford III, The History Teacher
"A major contribution to the history of education and the material
culture of childhood, this book is one of the few to show how an
educational theory was implemented in actual classrooms. Much more
than a study of the first modern educational fad, this work
explores the Americanization of European educational ideas, the use
of object lessons in racial socialization, and how a largely
forgotten vocabulary shaped nineteenth-century political
discourse." --Steven
Mintz, author of Huck's Raft: A History of American Childhood
"In this terrific book, Sarah Carter takes us back to a
nineteenth-century world, now almost entirely forgotten, where
ideas were taught with things and 'object lessons' were not simply
metaphoric. And in taking us on this journey she raises all sorts
of questions about how we teach, how we learn, and how we know.
Really smart."--Steven Conn, author of Do Museums Still Need
Objects?
"Sarah Carter has written a learned intellectual history of the
nineteenth-century foundations of material culture theory.
Attentive to the desire of educators to use real objects to promote
critical sequential thinking, the mid-century fascination with
taxonomical classification of the natural and manufactured world,
the moral underpinnings of thinking with and through objects, and
the use of object studies as a form of racial objectification, this
volume
delineates clearly the complex, often fraught, relationship between
thinking and 'thinging.' Carter sees object lessons as both method
and metaphor, system and justification, truth and fiction. As
result of this study, the material turn in art history, literature,
and history can now be more fully understood."--Edward S. Cooke
Jr., Charles F. Montgomery Professor of the History of Art, Yale
University
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