Description

Book Synopsis
The everyday material world of rural Canadian families in the nineteenth century.

Trade Review
" Offers a unique perspective on early rural Ontario that shows that " Upper Canadian men and women were consumers of goods that were modern in the context of their times" and were fully engaged in the nineteenth century international world of consumer goods. This is an important lesson for all scholars working on frontier settlement and consumption history. Of immense value to future scholars of nineteenth century material and consumer life are the tables and appendices that McCalla provides at the end of the book." Journal of Economic History " McCalla' s groundbreaking findings lead him to question the emigrant guides, descriptions of colonial life, policy documents, and reminiscences that have shaped understandings of this society. Rejecting the myth of the self-sufficient pioneer farmer, he concludes that " household production should not be contrasted with market involvement. " This book," the author tells us, " represents an experiment in bringing retail accounts fully into the study of consumption. It contributes to the debates about trends and transitions in consumption and market orientation by showing how some rural families used a specific store." In this stated purpose, McCalla succeeds beautifully." Journal of Social History " [A] solid and useful starting point to promote additional investigations of early Canadian consumer history. The findings are summarized in seven extremely detailed chapters, a thirty-six-table appendix, and a list of purchased goods indicating the dates when they appear in the stores' account books. On that count alone, the volume is invaluable, as we know next to nothing about what was actually retailed and consumed in Ontario in the first half of the nineteenth century." American Historical Review

Consumers in the Bush

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    A Paperback by Douglas Mccalla

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      View other formats and editions of Consumers in the Bush by Douglas Mccalla

      Publisher: John Wiley & Sons
      Publication Date: 3/20/2015 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780773545007, 978-0773545007
      ISBN10: 077354500X

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      The everyday material world of rural Canadian families in the nineteenth century.

      Trade Review
      " Offers a unique perspective on early rural Ontario that shows that " Upper Canadian men and women were consumers of goods that were modern in the context of their times" and were fully engaged in the nineteenth century international world of consumer goods. This is an important lesson for all scholars working on frontier settlement and consumption history. Of immense value to future scholars of nineteenth century material and consumer life are the tables and appendices that McCalla provides at the end of the book." Journal of Economic History " McCalla' s groundbreaking findings lead him to question the emigrant guides, descriptions of colonial life, policy documents, and reminiscences that have shaped understandings of this society. Rejecting the myth of the self-sufficient pioneer farmer, he concludes that " household production should not be contrasted with market involvement. " This book," the author tells us, " represents an experiment in bringing retail accounts fully into the study of consumption. It contributes to the debates about trends and transitions in consumption and market orientation by showing how some rural families used a specific store." In this stated purpose, McCalla succeeds beautifully." Journal of Social History " [A] solid and useful starting point to promote additional investigations of early Canadian consumer history. The findings are summarized in seven extremely detailed chapters, a thirty-six-table appendix, and a list of purchased goods indicating the dates when they appear in the stores' account books. On that count alone, the volume is invaluable, as we know next to nothing about what was actually retailed and consumed in Ontario in the first half of the nineteenth century." American Historical Review

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