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    <title><![CDATA[Children and Youth in History]]></title>
    <link>http://cyh.rrchnm.org/items/browse/8?tag=1900-1945&amp;output=rss2</link>
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    <pubDate>Wed, 11 Aug 2021 03:25:53 +0000</pubDate>
    <managingEditor>chnm@gmu.edu (Children and Youth in History)</managingEditor>
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      <title><![CDATA[LIFE photo archive]]></title>
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    <h2>Dublin Core</h2>
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                                    <div class="element-text">LIFE photo archive</div>
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                                    <div class="element-text">Kelly Schrum</div>
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                                    <div class="element-text">http://images.google.com/hosted/life</div>
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                                    <div class="element-text">LIFE</div>
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                                    <div class="element-text">July 2009</div>
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                                    <div class="element-text"><p>Imagine walking down a hallway lined with photographs. Now imagine walking through a labyrinth of hallways with 10 million photographs and drawings, the approximate number of images available in the <a class="external" href="http://images.google.com/hosted/life">LIFE photo archive</a>, hosted by Google.</p>




<p>On one wall, a black-and-white photograph shows a white <a class="external" href="http://images.google.com/hosted/life/l?q=baby+source:life&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dbaby%2Bsource:life%26hl%3Den%26sa%3DG&imgurl=b8d518ed7be676e8">baby</a> perched on the edge of a sink holding a toothbrush in its mouth. On another, an African American <a class="external" href="http://images.google.com/hosted/life/l?imgurl=71e898949d8afe69&q=canaries%20source:life&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dcanaries%2Bsource:life%26hl%3Den">toddler</a> sits snuggled in a blanket on a shelter chair during a flood in Louisville, Kentucky. Still other images show two <a class="external" href="http://images.google.com/hosted/life/l?imgurl=45d59640baba1c89&q=children%20source:life&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dchildren%2Bsource:life%26hl%3Den%26sa%3DG">daughters</a> of Czar Nicholas II of Russia on an outdoor patio, <a class="external" href="http://images.google.com/hosted/life/l?imgurl=2f62ab2c0be61763&q=school%20children%20ecuador%20source:life&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dschool%2Bchildren%2Becuador%2Bsource:life%26hl%3Den%26sa%3DG">school children</a> in Ecuador waving flags during a visit by U.S. President Richard Nixon, <a class="external" href="http://images.google.com/hosted/life/l?imgurl=e25bd66583cc0c56&q=nazi%20youth%20marching%20source:life&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dnazi%2Byouth%2Bmarching%2Bsource:life%26hl%3Den">uniform-clad boys</a> in the Nazi Youth Movement marching in formation, or an 11-year-old <a class="external" href="http://images.google.com/hosted/life/l?imgurl=894198074caab69e&q=marbles%20source:life&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dmarbles%2Bsource:life%26hl%3Den%26sa%3DG">Amish girl</a> shooting marbles in the U.S. national girls' tournament.</p>

<p>This remarkable collection is a visual goldmine. Teachers and students of an almost endless number of topics related to children and youth in American and world history can explore for hours, searching photographs and drawings from the 1750s to the present, most of which are seen publicly for the first time on this website. The majority of the images come from the 20th century, showcasing the work of famous photographers, such as <a class="external" href="http://images.google.com/images?hl=en&sa=1&q=gordon+parks+source:life&btnG=Search+images&aq=f&oq=">Gordon Park</a>, <a class="external" href="http://images.google.com/images?hl=en&sa=1&q="Alfred+Eisenstaedt"+source:life&btnG=Search+images&aq=f&oq=">Alfred Eisenstaedt</a>, and <a class="external" href="http://images.google.com/images?sa=4&imgc=&imgsz=&q="Margaret+Bourke-White"+source:life">Margaret Bourke-White</a>, among many others.</p>

<p>Exploring this archive, however, is at once fascinating, rewarding, and incredibly frustrating. Search results are capped at a maximum of 200 images, meaning that a search on <a class="external" href="http://images.google.com/images?hl=en&sa=1&q=children+source:life&btnG=Search+images&aq=f&oq=">"children"</a> returns only a tiny fraction of the possible matches. Some images are presented with basic source information, such as title, location, date, photographer, and image size while others provide no information at all, leaving the viewer with many unanswered questions.</p>

<p>Some images are part of collections, such as the hundreds of <a class="external" href="http://images.google.com/images?hl=en&sa=1&q=%22Gibson+Girl%22+source:life&btnG=Search+images&aq=f&oq=">"Gibson Girls"</a> drawings or the <a class="external" href="http://images.google.com/images?hl=en&sa=1&q="circus+girl"+source:life&btnG=Search+images&aq=f&oq=">"Circus Girl"</a> photographs taken in 1952. In the right column, "related images" sometimes appear and many of the images are tagged with "labels" that offer pathways through the mass of images. An image of a baby, for example, might lead to a tag for <a class="external" href="http://images.google.com/images?sa=4&imgc=&imgsz=&q="baby+carriage"+source:life">"baby carriage,"</a> <a class="external" href="http://images.google.com/images?hl=en&sa=1&q="children+at+play"+source:life&btnG=Search+images&aq=f&oq=">"children at play,"</a> <a class="external" href="http://images.google.com/images?hl=en&sa=1&q="blind+children"+source:life&btnG=Search+images&aq=f&oq=">"blind children,"</a> or <a class="external" href="http://images.google.com/images?hl=en&sa=1&q="child+care"+source:life&btnG=Search+images&aq=f&oq=">"child care,"</a> all of which lead down other paths or abruptly end. Or an image might link to no other images, sending you back to the beginning to find another path.</p>

<p>Photographs appear in three sizes: small, medium, and large. Images are presented at 300 dpi and even the medium-sized images are of decent size for classroom use, roughly 400 x 600 pixels. The larger scans contain a LIFE watermark and while all images are available at no cost for personal and research purposes, the archive also offers each image for sale, framed, at a cost of $79.99 and up.</p>

<p>The photographs as a whole depict a range of childhood experiences, from famous young people in formal settings (<a class="external" href="http://images.google.com/hosted/life/l?imgurl=609ebe934f25d383&q=shirley%20temple%20source:life&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dshirley%2Btemple%2Bsource:life%26hl%3Den">Shirley Temple</a> on her 11th birthday "wearing her first long dress, a fluffy frock of marquisette trimmed with a dubonnet ribbon") to ordinary children engaged in everyday activities, such as the children at a <a class="external" href="http://images.google.com/hosted/life/l?imgurl=9c262e451a0b6f2a&q=Turkish%20tobacco%20factory%20%20source:life&prev=/images%3Fq%3DTurkish%2Btobacco%2Bfactory%2B%2Bsource:life%26hl%3Den%26sa%3DG">Turkish tobacco factory daycare</a> "where working moms drop their kids during their day shift."</p>

<p>Spanning several centuries and many borders, this collection provides a glimpse into many different experiences of childhood and youth. Students could examine a range of customs across time and culture, exploring, for example, the material culture of childhood from swaddling to cribs or the role of institutions, such as schools, hospitals, orphanages, in the lives of young people. Even more revealing, however, would be an assignment exploring what the words and images found within this archive tell us about the society that produced and consumed <em>Life</em> magazine—the photographers, editors, writers, and subscribers who interacted with these images and created meaning from them day to day.</p> 

<p>The caption next to the young girl in the shelter, for example, reads, <a class="external" href="http://images.google.com/hosted/life/l?imgurl=71e898949d8afe69&q=canaries%20source:life&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dcanaries%2Bsource:life%26hl%3Den">"Lonely little African-American baby sucking her thumb."</a> Next to a 1938 photograph from Romania is the caption, <a class="external" href="http://images.google.com/hosted/life/l?imgurl=5e6b304586a9e6c0&q=gypsy%20dirty%20source:life&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dgypsy%2Bdirty%2Bsource:life%26hl%3Den">"A Gypsy lighting the small oven while holding her dirty child."</a> White children are rarely described as "lonely" or "dirty," even when collected under the label "poverty."</p> 

<p>The subjects selected are equally telling. Several photographs of <a class="external" href="http://images.google.com/hosted/life/l?imgurl=388c72e363733d9d&q=queen%20baby%20source:life&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dqueen%2Bbaby%2Bsource:life%26hl%3Den%26sa%3DG">African mothers nursing</a> their newborns focus on the women's breasts and nipples. Other women from Myanmar, Vietnam, Finland, Albania, Pakistan, and Israel are also shown nursing. Compare this to images of <a class="external" href="http://images.google.com/hosted/life/l?imgurl=85e14d0c674f5557&q=feeding%20baby%20source:life&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dfeeding%2Bbaby%2Bsource:life%26hl%3Den%26sa%3DG">white women</a> with their young, fully dressed and often, in the mid-20th century, with a <a class="external" href="http://images.google.com/hosted/life/l?imgurl=dba6079dd75a1b62&q=feeding%20baby%20source:life&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dfeeding%2Bbaby%2Bsource:life%26ndsp%3D20%26hl%3Den%26sa%3DN%26start%3D20">bottle</a>. What does this say about perceptions of motherhood, gender, and child rearing? About gender, race, and nationality?</p> 

<p>This rich archive can provide primary source material on a host of national and international topics, from dress, play, education, and health to national identity and international relations. Whether looking for something specific, such as images from a 1951 <a class="external" href="http://images.google.com/images?hl=en&sa=1&q=comic+book+hearings+source:life&btnG=Search+images&aq=f&oq=">hearing on comic books</a>, or broad, such as <a class="external" href="http://images.google.com/images?hl=en&sa=1&q=high+school+source:life&btnG=Search+images&aq=f&oq=">high school</a>, you will likely find many images worth exploring. The images are high enough quality to print and use easily for research or class assignments. Keep in mind, however, that despite the powerful Google search engine, in some ways you are left to wander through the labyrinth unguided, without a map that might provide a sense of how images fit into the collection as a whole. It is hard to know exactly what a given search term will return and with the limit on search results, it is impossible to see the full range of images on many topics. It is, however, a worthwhile adventure if you begin with patience and creativity.</p>

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        <h3>Website Reviewer</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">Kelly Schrum</div>
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                                    <div class="element-text">George Mason University</div>
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                                    <div class="element-text">This rich archive can provide primary source material on a host of national and international topics, from dress, play, education, and health to national identity and international relations. </div>
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        </div><!-- end element-set --><div class="item-file image-jpeg"><a class="download-file" href="/files/download/203/fullsize"><img src="/files/display/203/square_thumbnail" class="thumb" alt="LIFE photo archive" width="250" height="250"/>
</a></div>]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 21 Jul 2009 01:13:54 +0000</pubDate>
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      <title><![CDATA[The Lemonade Stand [Advertisement]]]></title>
      <link>https://cyh.rrchnm.org/items/show/245</link>
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                                    <div class="element-text">The Lemonade Stand [Advertisement]</div>
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                                    <div class="element-text"><p>The lemonade stand is a widely used and recognized symbol of capitalism and in particular entrepreneurship. The selling of lemonade on the streets of New York can be traced back to when a New York youngster sold it to thirsty street car riders over 130 years ago. Its connection to youthful entrepreneurship has endured. Today it is often the first entrepreneurial venture of young people and is frequently mentioned as a summertime activity. The operation of a lemonade stand is clearly established as a learning or teaching tool and translates well into games for children, simulations and classroom exercises in most grades. The lemonade stand as a symbol lends itself to story-telling and is the basis of plot development in many children's story-books. It is featured in newspaper and magazine cartoons, media stories every summer, web sites, books and television programs. The lemonade stand as a symbol of capitalism and entrepreneurship is relevant today and endures despite changes in beverage preferences and children's activities.</p></div>
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                                    <div class="element-text">Electric Power and Light Company, Ad, <em>Life Magazine</em>, May 1947, 4. Annotated by Robert Sexty.</div>
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                                    <div class="element-text">Robert W. Sexty</div>
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                                    <div class="element-text">English</div>
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            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-website-image" class="element">
        <h3>Website Image</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-analyzing-sources" class="element">
        <h3>Analyzing Sources</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-publisher" class="element">
        <h3>Publisher</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-creator" class="element">
        <h3>Creator</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">Robert W. Sexty</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-source" class="element">
        <h3>Source</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-date" class="element">
        <h3>Date</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">June 2009</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-rights" class="element">
        <h3>Rights</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-bibliographic-citation" class="element">
        <h3>Bibliographic Citation</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-provenance" class="element">
        <h3>Provenance</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-citation" class="element">
        <h3>Citation</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-spatial-coverage" class="element">
        <h3>Spatial Coverage</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-rights-holder" class="element">
        <h3>Rights Holder</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-temporal-coverage" class="element">
        <h3>Temporal Coverage</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
        </div><!-- end element-set --><div class="element-set">
    <h2>Document Item Type Metadata</h2>
        <div id="document-item-type-metadata-text" class="element">
        <h3>Text</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text"><h3>Captain of Industry</h3>
<p>Butch wants a bicycle! Lots of lawn and lemonade and baby-sitting lie between Butch and that bike, but we’re betting on the boy. He has energy, vision, and our national habit of working hard for what he wants. He’s American business – in miniature.</p>

<p>There are many names for Butch’s philosophy. You can call it Free Enterprise, Opportunity, Democracy, or Capitalism, if you want.</p>

<p>But whatever the name, America owes it much. For our most valuable natural resource lies in the ambition and initiative of Americans like Butch.</p>

<p>As great publications have grown from the dreams of young men with old hand-presses – the electric industry had small beginnings, too. A few men with vision strung the first short lines. People with faith risked their savings. Better and better service, at lower and lower cost, created more and more jobs – and carried the benefits of electric living to more and more people.</p>

<p>Free enterprise—and hard work—will bring Butch and his bike together. They are what built America and the American way of life. No nation on earth has found a satisfactory substitute for that combination.”

<p><em>Listen to the New Electric Hour – the</em> HOUR OF CHARM. <em>Sundays, 4:30 P.M., EDT, CBS.</em></p>

<h3>America’s business-managed, tax-paying<br />
ELECTRIC LIGHT AND POWER COMPANIES.</h3>
</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="document-item-type-metadata-related-primary-sources" class="element">
        <h3>Related Primary Sources</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
        </div><!-- end element-set --><div class="item-file image-jpeg"><a class="download-file" href="/files/download/250/fullsize"><img src="/files/display/250/square_thumbnail" class="thumb" alt="The Lemonade Stand [Advertisement]" width="250" height="250"/>
</a></div>]]></description>
      <pubDate>Fri, 12 Jun 2009 21:52:51 +0000</pubDate>
      <enclosure url="https://cyh.rrchnm.org/files/download/250/fullsize" type="image/jpeg" length="319545"/>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title><![CDATA[World Images]]></title>
      <link>https://cyh.rrchnm.org/items/show/239</link>
      <description><![CDATA[<div class="element-set">
    <h2>Dublin Core</h2>
        <div id="dublin-core-title" class="element">
        <h3>Title</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">World Images</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-subject" class="element">
        <h3>Subject</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-description" class="element">
        <h3>Description</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-creator" class="element">
        <h3>Creator</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">Susan Douglass</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-source" class="element">
        <h3>Source</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-publisher" class="element">
        <h3>Publisher</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-date" class="element">
        <h3>Date</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-contributor" class="element">
        <h3>Contributor</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-rights" class="element">
        <h3>Rights</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-relation" class="element">
        <h3>Relation</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-format" class="element">
        <h3>Format</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-language" class="element">
        <h3>Language</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-type" class="element">
        <h3>Type</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-identifier" class="element">
        <h3>Identifier</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-coverage" class="element">
        <h3>Coverage</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
        </div><!-- end element-set --><div class="element-set">
    <h2>Additional Item Metadata</h2>
        <div id="additional-item-metadata-transcription" class="element">
        <h3>Transcription</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-local-url" class="element">
        <h3>Local URL</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-online-submission" class="element">
        <h3>Online Submission</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-posting-consent" class="element">
        <h3>Posting Consent</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-submission-consent" class="element">
        <h3>Submission Consent</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-process-edit" class="element">
        <h3>Process Edit</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-process-annotate" class="element">
        <h3>Process Annotate</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-process-review" class="element">
        <h3>Process Review</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-website-image" class="element">
        <h3>Website Image</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-analyzing-sources" class="element">
        <h3>Analyzing Sources</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-publisher" class="element">
        <h3>Publisher</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-creator" class="element">
        <h3>Creator</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-source" class="element">
        <h3>Source</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-date" class="element">
        <h3>Date</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-rights" class="element">
        <h3>Rights</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-bibliographic-citation" class="element">
        <h3>Bibliographic Citation</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-provenance" class="element">
        <h3>Provenance</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-citation" class="element">
        <h3>Citation</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-spatial-coverage" class="element">
        <h3>Spatial Coverage</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-rights-holder" class="element">
        <h3>Rights Holder</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-temporal-coverage" class="element">
        <h3>Temporal Coverage</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
        </div><!-- end element-set --><div class="element-set">
    <h2>Website Review Item Type Metadata</h2>
        <div id="website-review-item-type-metadata-website-url" class="element">
        <h3>Website URL</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">http://worldart.sjsu.edu </div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="website-review-item-type-metadata-website-creator" class="element">
        <h3>Website Creator</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">California State University</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="website-review-item-type-metadata-date-of-review" class="element">
        <h3>Date of Review</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">April 2009</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="website-review-item-type-metadata-website-review-text" class="element">
        <h3>Website Review Text</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text"><p>The <a class="external" href="http://worldart.sjsu.edu"><em>World Images</em></a> site, a project of California State University, is designed for simplicity of use if not aesthetic elegance. It is a utilitarian database well suited to teachers, professors, or students looking for presentation images licensed for educational use on a comprehensive range of subjects including photography, painting, illustration, and material culture with global geographic representation.</p>

<p>The image collections are arranged as thumbnail panes on the home page, each hyperlinked to a list of portfolios that indicate how many images each contains. The site holds an archive of 72,000 images organized into 867 portfolios, and a tutorial shows how to create Community Portfolios. Users can browse the collection using keywords, artists, topics, titles, regions, or periods in quick or advanced search modes. Search results can be viewed as titles with hyperlinked acquisition numbers, as thumbnail images with titles, or as small or zoomable images with their metadata.</p> 
<p>Categories include institutional collections in the database, faculty collections, course materials, and a collection of image portfolios correlated to required history topics in the California Educational Standards for grades 4–10. Since these curricular requirements are fairly common across the U.S., and in world history beyond the U.S., this is a valuable resource for teachers.</p> 

<p><em>World Images</em> is rich in images related to children and youth. The "People and Portraits" portfolio contains three sub-categories on children with a total of 1,094 images, some overlapping. They include <a class="external" href="http://worldimages.sjsu.edu/?sid=1255&x=2996373">Children to 1500</a> (234), <a class="external" href="http://worldimages.sjsu.edu/Prt246?sid=1255&x=101517?Display=thu ">Children 1500-2000</a> (544), and <a class="external" href="http://worldimages.sjsu.edu/Prt233?sid=1255&x=101518?Display=thu ">Children of the World</a> (316).</p> 

<p>The first is fairly inclusive geographically, but includes many images from Western traditions. The second is almost entirely European and American, and the third includes North and South American, African, Asian, and European children's photos and a few artworks and artifacts.  Much of the third collection is the work of photographer Kathleen Cohen.</p> 

<p>The following search terms returned images on children and youth: "children" (1000), "childhood" (80), "girl" (382), "boy" (555 items), "infant" (119), and "family" (858). The metadata provided with each image includes title, artist or maker, historical period, region or country of origin, copyright holder of the image, and/or museum holding the object. The individual object view also shows what other collections include the object, and links to other objects by the same artist or unknown generic maker from that culture.  The photographs are labeled with title, year, location, and photographer, but nothing further, though some of the titles are very descriptive.</p> 

<p>The information associated with <em>World Images</em> is thus limited, providing no further contextualization, nor are there links to descriptive information on museum sites where some are housed, for example. For this reason, the works of art found through this website are starting points for research about children in history rather than destinations. Some images, however interesting, remain mysterious.</p>

<p>Teachers wanting to illustrate already researched lectures or activities with licensed images will find this site a rich resource, especially if the lack of detailed information on the images is not a problem. Interesting objects from the collection can stimulate fruitful discoveries of available research on the web or from books and articles. For example, an image of an ancient baby bottle led to a trove of online information about infant feeding through the centuries.</p>

<p>Teachers can also create thematic collections that can be used for primary source investigations. A number of art images show punishment of children's misbehavior, for example, and children at play, as well as infant equipment from various times and places. These images can be used as exercises in examining primary sources as if they were "found objects" at a site or in an archive.</p> 

<p><a class="external" href="http://chnm.gmu.edu/worldhistorysources/index.html">World History Sources</a> at the <a class="external" href="http://chnm.gmu.edu/ ">Center for History and New Media</a> has extensive lessons, exercises, and scholarly models for analyzing primary sources, including photographs, that could provide tools for working with the rich sources available on this website. A feature called "You be the Historian" could be adapted to interrogating the images from the <em>World Images</em> collections, and would reveal much about childhood by investigating questions to ask, and suggesting how to find answers.</p>



</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="website-review-item-type-metadata-image-file-name" class="element">
        <h3>Image File Name</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="website-review-item-type-metadata-website-reviewer" class="element">
        <h3>Website Reviewer</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">Susan Douglass</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="website-review-item-type-metadata-website-reviewer-institution" class="element">
        <h3>Website Reviewer Institution</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">George Mason University</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="website-review-item-type-metadata-pullquote" class="element">
        <h3>Pullquote</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">World Images is rich in images related to children and youth. </div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
        </div><!-- end element-set --><div class="item-file image-jpeg"><a class="download-file" href="/files/download/161/fullsize"><img src="/files/display/161/square_thumbnail" class="thumb" alt="World Images" width="250" height="250"/>
</a></div>]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 19 May 2009 20:03:19 +0000</pubDate>
      <enclosure url="https://cyh.rrchnm.org/files/download/161/fullsize" type="image/jpeg" length="22441"/>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title><![CDATA[Student Letter to Pierre DuPont [Letter]]]></title>
      <link>https://cyh.rrchnm.org/items/show/237</link>
      <description><![CDATA[<div class="element-set">
    <h2>Dublin Core</h2>
        <div id="dublin-core-title" class="element">
        <h3>Title</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">Student Letter to Pierre DuPont [Letter]</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-subject" class="element">
        <h3>Subject</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-description" class="element">
        <h3>Description</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text"><p>Thelma Norwood, a 7th-grade student in Nassau, Delaware, wrote this letter in 1925. The school was segregated, or used only by African Americans, while separate schools were maintained for white students. The letter expresses appreciation on Du Pont Day, a celebration held each year to show gratitude to Pierre du Pont, founding member of DuPont Corporation, who spearheaded an effort to improve and modernize education for African Americans in Delaware. Du Pont worked to draw attention to the problem of inadequate education, donating over $6 million of his own money to fund studies, school construction, and to gain community support for improving African American children&rsquo;s school access and attendance.</p>
<p>Thelma's letter illustrates the community's response to du Pont's gift, and indicates some ways in which the school administration showed gratitude toward du Pont through school activities and writing assignments. Her letter reflects both obstacles to education such as student absence due to the need for child labor to help support the family, and milestones of progress such as the recent graduates who went on to college (including Thelma's brother or cousin Charles). Her listing of the school's new equipment allows the inference that such items were lacking in her previous school, and the subjects listed indicate that both academic and vocational topics were taught. Many African Americans would have gone from the 8th grade directly into jobs, while few had the opportunity to attend high school, and even fewer to attend college.</p></div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-creator" class="element">
        <h3>Creator</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">Thelma Norwood</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-source" class="element">
        <h3>Source</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text"><em>A Separate Place: the Schools P.S. DuPont Built</em> (Wilmington, DE: Hagley Museum and Library, 2003) at <a class="external" href="http://www.hagley.lib.de.us/hagley-separate-place-packet.pdf">http://www.hagley.lib.de.us/hagley-separate-place-packet.pdf</a>, pages 24–26  (accessed April 21, 2009). <a class="external" href="http://www.hagley.org">Hagley Museum and Library</a>.</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-publisher" class="element">
        <h3>Publisher</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-date" class="element">
        <h3>Date</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">1935-10-30</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-contributor" class="element">
        <h3>Contributor</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">Kelly Schrum and Susan Douglass</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-rights" class="element">
        <h3>Rights</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-relation" class="element">
        <h3>Relation</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">236, 259, 260, 261</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-format" class="element">
        <h3>Format</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">text, image/jpeg</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-language" class="element">
        <h3>Language</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">en</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-type" class="element">
        <h3>Type</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-identifier" class="element">
        <h3>Identifier</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-coverage" class="element">
        <h3>Coverage</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
        </div><!-- end element-set --><div class="element-set">
    <h2>Additional Item Metadata</h2>
        <div id="additional-item-metadata-transcription" class="element">
        <h3>Transcription</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-local-url" class="element">
        <h3>Local URL</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-online-submission" class="element">
        <h3>Online Submission</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-posting-consent" class="element">
        <h3>Posting Consent</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-submission-consent" class="element">
        <h3>Submission Consent</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-process-edit" class="element">
        <h3>Process Edit</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-process-annotate" class="element">
        <h3>Process Annotate</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-process-review" class="element">
        <h3>Process Review</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-website-image" class="element">
        <h3>Website Image</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-analyzing-sources" class="element">
        <h3>Analyzing Sources</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-publisher" class="element">
        <h3>Publisher</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-creator" class="element">
        <h3>Creator</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-source" class="element">
        <h3>Source</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-date" class="element">
        <h3>Date</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-rights" class="element">
        <h3>Rights</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-bibliographic-citation" class="element">
        <h3>Bibliographic Citation</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text"><em>A Separate Place: the Schools P.S. DuPont Built</em> (Wilmington, DE: Hagley Museum and Library, 2003) at <a class="external" href="http://www.hagley.lib.de.us/hagley-separate-place-packet.pdf">http://www.hagley.lib.de.us/hagley-separate-place-packet.pdf</a>, pages 24–26  (accessed April 21, 2009).</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-provenance" class="element">
        <h3>Provenance</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-citation" class="element">
        <h3>Citation</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-spatial-coverage" class="element">
        <h3>Spatial Coverage</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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            <div id="additional-item-metadata-rights-holder" class="element">
        <h3>Rights Holder</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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            <div id="additional-item-metadata-temporal-coverage" class="element">
        <h3>Temporal Coverage</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
        </div><!-- end element-set --><div class="element-set">
    <h2>Document Item Type Metadata</h2>
        <div id="document-item-type-metadata-text" class="element">
        <h3>Text</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text"><div style="text-align: right;">Nassau Delaware</div>
<div style="text-align: right;">October 30, 1925</div>
<br />Honorable Pierre S. du Pont <br />1116 du Pont Building <br />Wilmington, Delaware  <br /><br />Dear Sir: <br /><br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Our Teacher has asked us to write you a letter to day, for we all know that you were the one that gave us our New School. Our School is as good as it was when we first came into it. We would like for you to come down, for we have all wishes to see you. We all appreciate our New School Building. In our School we have two wall clocks, an organ, graphonola, pencil sharpner, oil stove for hot lunches, two maps--one of South America, and one of the United States. We have five graduates at State College Dover Delaware--three boys and two girls--Christina Maull, Levata Williams, Cyrus Sparrow, Arthur Ward, Charles Norwood. I am in the Seventh Grade. We have Community Civics, Hygiene, Arithmetic, Geography, History, Language, Reader, Spelling and Industrial Artwork. In Industrial Artwork, we draw, make crepe paper flowers, baskets, etc. I like all of my studies very much and I am proud of all of my books. <br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; I attended school eight days in September, three in October. I am sorry to say that I have been working to the packing house all summer, but I started to school for good now. I was very sorry that I couldn&rsquo;t get to School those days I was absent. I hope I wont have have to miss any more days this year. Our teacher is back this year. This makes the fourth year that she has taught our school. Her name is Mrs. Virginia H. Jones. The Primary Room has a new teacher, Miss Laurencetta M. Hicks. We all love both of the teachers. <br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; We are celebrating (du Pont Day) to night, and have invited all of the Parents. We will have, cake, and ice cream to night. <br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; We wish that you might live many more years to see what the Delaware Children might accomplish. <br /><br />
<div style="text-align: left;">
<div style="text-align: right;">Very Truly,</div>
<div style="text-align: right;">Thelma Norwood</div>
</div></div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="document-item-type-metadata-related-primary-sources" class="element">
        <h3>Related Primary Sources</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
        </div><!-- end element-set --><div class="item-file image-jpeg"><a class="download-file" href="/files/download/156/fullsize"><img src="/files/display/156/square_thumbnail" class="thumb" alt="Student Letter to Pierre DuPont [Letter]" width="250" height="250"/>
</a></div>]]></description>
      <pubDate>Sat, 09 May 2009 18:38:23 +0000</pubDate>
      <enclosure url="https://cyh.rrchnm.org/files/download/156/fullsize" type="image/jpeg" length="222953"/>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title><![CDATA[Blocksom’s School, Sussex County, Delaware [Photograph]]]></title>
      <link>https://cyh.rrchnm.org/items/show/236</link>
      <description><![CDATA[<div class="element-set">
    <h2>Dublin Core</h2>
        <div id="dublin-core-title" class="element">
        <h3>Title</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">Blocksom’s School, Sussex County, Delaware [Photograph]</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-subject" class="element">
        <h3>Subject</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-description" class="element">
        <h3>Description</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text"><p>These two photographs show before and after pictures of Blocksom's School in Sussex County in rural Delaware. The first photo (taken in 1917) shows the pupils standing outside the original one-room schoolhouse made of wood. In addition to an outhouse and heat provided by a pot-bellied stove, which the older boys had to start every morning and keep burning during the school day, there is no running water. All of the classes, from primary to 8th grade, shared the same teacher and the same space. The second photograph (taken in 1925) shows a new and much larger Blocksom's School, made of brick, with indoor toilet, multiple classrooms, and heating. The new school was built with funds donated by Pierre S. du Pont, President of E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Co. and General Motors in the 1920s, who spearheaded an effort to improve and modernize education in Delaware, particularly for African Americans. He found the state in 1911 spending only about $400 per year on education of white children, and half that for African Americans. To build public support for his cause, du Pont funded and published surveys of Delaware's schools through Columbia University's Bank Street Teacher's College that showed the poor state of the state public education system. After attempting to achieve his goals through state government, he decided to fund and oversee the construction himself, committing over $6 million to build modern schools, among which were 89 schools for African Americans.</p></div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-creator" class="element">
        <h3>Creator</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-source" class="element">
        <h3>Source</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text"><em>A Separate Place: the Schools P.S. DuPont Built</em> (Wilmington, DE: Hagley Museum and Library, 2003) at <a class="external" href="http://www.hagley.lib.de.us/hagley-separate-place-packet.pdf">http://www.hagley.lib.de.us/hagley-separate-place-packet.pdf</a>, page 29.   (accessed April 21, 2009). <a class="external" href="http://www.hagley.org">Hagley Museum and Library</a>.</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-publisher" class="element">
        <h3>Publisher</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-date" class="element">
        <h3>Date</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-contributor" class="element">
        <h3>Contributor</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">Kelly Schrum and Susan Douglass</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-rights" class="element">
        <h3>Rights</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-relation" class="element">
        <h3>Relation</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">261, 260, 259, 237</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-format" class="element">
        <h3>Format</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">image/jpeg</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-language" class="element">
        <h3>Language</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">en</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-type" class="element">
        <h3>Type</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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            <div id="dublin-core-identifier" class="element">
        <h3>Identifier</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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            <div id="dublin-core-coverage" class="element">
        <h3>Coverage</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
        </div><!-- end element-set --><div class="element-set">
    <h2>Additional Item Metadata</h2>
        <div id="additional-item-metadata-transcription" class="element">
        <h3>Transcription</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-local-url" class="element">
        <h3>Local URL</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-online-submission" class="element">
        <h3>Online Submission</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-posting-consent" class="element">
        <h3>Posting Consent</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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            <div id="additional-item-metadata-submission-consent" class="element">
        <h3>Submission Consent</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Process Edit</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Process Annotate</h3>
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            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-process-review" class="element">
        <h3>Process Review</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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            <div id="additional-item-metadata-website-image" class="element">
        <h3>Website Image</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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            <div id="additional-item-metadata-analyzing-sources" class="element">
        <h3>Analyzing Sources</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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            <div id="additional-item-metadata-publisher" class="element">
        <h3>Publisher</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Creator</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Source</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text"><em>A Separate Place: the Schools P.S. DuPont Built</em> (Wilmington, DE: Hagley Museum and Library, 2003) at <a class="external" href="http://www.hagley.lib.de.us/hagley-separate-place-packet.pdf">http://www.hagley.lib.de.us/hagley-separate-place-packet.pdf</a>, page 29.   (accessed April 21, 2009).</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
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        <h3>Date</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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            <div id="additional-item-metadata-bibliographic-citation" class="element">
        <h3>Bibliographic Citation</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Provenance</h3>
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                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Rights Holder</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Temporal Coverage</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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    <h2>Still Image Item Type Metadata</h2>
        <div id="still-image-item-type-metadata-physical-dimensions" class="element">
        <h3>Physical Dimensions</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
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        <h3>Image Description</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">Two black and white photographs showing before and after pictures of Blocksom&#039;s School in Sussex County in rural Delaware. The first photo (taken in 1917) shows the pupils standing outside the original one-room schoolhouse made of wood. In addition to an outhouse and heat provided by a pot-bellied stove. The second photograph (taken in 1925) shows a new and much larger Blocksom&#039;s School, made of brick, with indoor toilet, multiple classrooms, and heating.</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="still-image-item-type-metadata-related-primary-sources" class="element">
        <h3>Related Primary Sources</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
        </div><!-- end element-set --><div class="item-file image-jpeg"><a class="download-file" href="/files/download/157/fullsize"><img src="/files/display/157/square_thumbnail" class="thumb" alt="Blocksom’s School, Sussex County, Delaware [Photograph]" width="250" height="250"/>
</a></div>]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 05 May 2009 03:04:10 +0000</pubDate>
      <enclosure url="https://cyh.rrchnm.org/files/download/157/fullsize" type="image/jpeg" length="122008"/>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title><![CDATA[Wellcome Images]]></title>
      <link>https://cyh.rrchnm.org/items/show/234</link>
      <description><![CDATA[<div class="element-set">
    <h2>Dublin Core</h2>
        <div id="dublin-core-title" class="element">
        <h3>Title</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">Wellcome Images</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-subject" class="element">
        <h3>Subject</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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            <div id="dublin-core-description" class="element">
        <h3>Description</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-creator" class="element">
        <h3>Creator</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">Nancy Stockdale</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-source" class="element">
        <h3>Source</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Publisher</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Date</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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            <div id="dublin-core-contributor" class="element">
        <h3>Contributor</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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            <div id="dublin-core-rights" class="element">
        <h3>Rights</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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            <div id="dublin-core-relation" class="element">
        <h3>Relation</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-format" class="element">
        <h3>Format</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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            <div id="dublin-core-language" class="element">
        <h3>Language</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">eng</div>
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        <h3>Type</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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            <div id="dublin-core-identifier" class="element">
        <h3>Identifier</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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            <div id="dublin-core-coverage" class="element">
        <h3>Coverage</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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    <h2>Additional Item Metadata</h2>
        <div id="additional-item-metadata-transcription" class="element">
        <h3>Transcription</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-local-url" class="element">
        <h3>Local URL</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-online-submission" class="element">
        <h3>Online Submission</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-posting-consent" class="element">
        <h3>Posting Consent</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-submission-consent" class="element">
        <h3>Submission Consent</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-process-edit" class="element">
        <h3>Process Edit</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-process-annotate" class="element">
        <h3>Process Annotate</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
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        <h3>Process Review</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-website-image" class="element">
        <h3>Website Image</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-analyzing-sources" class="element">
        <h3>Analyzing Sources</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-publisher" class="element">
        <h3>Publisher</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-creator" class="element">
        <h3>Creator</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-source" class="element">
        <h3>Source</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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            <div id="additional-item-metadata-date" class="element">
        <h3>Date</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-rights" class="element">
        <h3>Rights</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-bibliographic-citation" class="element">
        <h3>Bibliographic Citation</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-provenance" class="element">
        <h3>Provenance</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-citation" class="element">
        <h3>Citation</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-spatial-coverage" class="element">
        <h3>Spatial Coverage</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-rights-holder" class="element">
        <h3>Rights Holder</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-temporal-coverage" class="element">
        <h3>Temporal Coverage</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
        </div><!-- end element-set --><div class="element-set">
    <h2>Website Review Item Type Metadata</h2>
        <div id="website-review-item-type-metadata-website-url" class="element">
        <h3>Website URL</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">http://images.wellcome.ac.uk/</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="website-review-item-type-metadata-website-creator" class="element">
        <h3>Website Creator</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">Wellcome Library</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="website-review-item-type-metadata-date-of-review" class="element">
        <h3>Date of Review</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">April 2009</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="website-review-item-type-metadata-website-review-text" class="element">
        <h3>Website Review Text</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text"><p>A remarkable collection of historical images focused on biomedical and other scientific topics, the <a class="external" href="http://images.wellcome.ac.uk/">Wellcome Images</a> website is a treasure trove for educators and students. Although there is not an emphasis on children&rsquo;s and youth history, creative use of the site&rsquo;s search engine allows scholars and students of the history of childhood some fascinating glimpses into changing presentations of children in various historical locations and eras. Moreover, there are many resources to facilitate education, particularly in the realms of medicine, biology, and the changing nature of scientific knowledge over time. This makes the Wellcome Images website a welcome addition to any educator&rsquo;s toolbox for teaching.</p>
<p>Scholars of childhood histories will find that the site's built-in search function easy to use, and, by plugging in keywords such as "boy," "girl," and "child," a plethora of images will emerge that depict a variety of historical representations of children. Many European images depicting methods of child health care, ranging from the medieval to modern eras, are available on the site. There are also scores of 20th-century promotional posters available that reveal (mainly) British public health education efforts promoting preferred methods of child rearing and health care. Moreover, there are tens of advertisements from the past 200 years, depicting children as promotional tools for selling hygiene products. There is a wealth of photographs and manuscripts from the medieval and modern eras from India that illustrate changing attitudes toward children and health care.</p>
<p>The Wellcome Images website is easy to navigate, and all images are free for personal and academic use under Creative Commons sharing rules. The site has divided its collections into five categories: "Illness and Wellness," "Life," "Culture," "Nature," and "War." Each image may be downloaded in a low-resolution format that is acceptable for websites, multi-media presentations, and other educational presentation needs. Users who wish to purchase high-resolution scans and physical prints may do so, for a price. Moreover, users who register (for free) with the website may save images to a "Lightbox," in order to compile, organize, and view their collections at any time. This is a welcome addition to the website and allows users to collect a variety of images at once, then sort and organize them later.</p>
<p>A useful section of the website is the "Life" section. Curated with an emphasis on human body parts and historically shifting notions of human anatomy, images from this group would be excellent sources for educators who wish to illustrate the changing conceptions of biology throughout the ages. Images of x-rays and microscopic cell photography sit side-by-side with Victorian "cure-all" advertisements and early modern anatomical illustrations. Like the rest of the site, the user must select his or her own images and place them within a larger historical context. However, given the proper supplementary information, this section in particular would be a wonderful basis for illustrating historical trends in understanding human biology. Comparing and contrasting images of children and adults would allow scholars of childhood histories the opportunity to discern changing attitudes about the nature of children and their anatomies over time and space.</p>
<p>Educators may want to keep a couple of caveats in mind when using this site. First of all, the collection is not comprehensive, nor it is chronologically organized. It is a marvelous resource for image finding, but not a starting point for obtaining information about any subject matter. Second, there are some rather graphic depictions of warfare, medical procedures, and biological functions shown in some of the images. Adults may want to preview the site before having younger children conduct research. That being said, the Wellcome Images website is a wonderful resource for educators and students who are looking for some fascinating historical images of scientific understanding of youth across cultures and eras.</p></div>
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                                    <div class="element-text">Nancy L. Stockdale</div>
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                                    <div class="element-text">A remarkable collection of historical images focused on biomedical and other scientific topics, the Wellcome Images website is a treasure trove for educators and students. </div>
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      <pubDate>Sat, 02 May 2009 19:27:05 +0000</pubDate>
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      <title><![CDATA[Age of Consent Laws]]></title>
      <link>https://cyh.rrchnm.org/items/show/230</link>
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                                    <div class="element-text"><p>This module traces the shifting ways that age of consent laws have been defined, debated and deployed worldwide and from the Middle Ages to the present, and explores how such laws figure in debates over the nature of childhood, adolescence, and adulthood, in campaigns against prostitution and child marriage, and teenage pregnancy, as well as struggles to achieve gender and sexual equality.</p></div>
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                                    <div class="element-text">Stephen Robertson</div>
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                                    <div class="element-text">eng</div>
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        <div id="teaching-module-item-type-metadata-bibliography" class="element">
        <h3>Bibliography</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text"><ol class="bibliography">
<li>Cocca, Carolyn. <em>Jailbait: The Politics of Statutory Rape Laws in the United States</em>. Albany: State University of New York Press, 2004.<br /> <span>A study of changes in American age of consent laws since the 1970s, which uses case studies to explore the roles of feminists, religious conservatives and legislators in shaping new laws.</span></li>
<li>Gorham, Deborah. "The Maiden Tribute of Modern Babylon Re-examined: Child Prostitution and the Idea of Childhood in Late-Victorian England." Victorian Studies 21 (Spring 1978): 353-79.<br /> <span>An older article, but still the most thoughtful analysis of the 'Maiden Tribute' scandal in terms of ideas about childhood. Gorham's emphasis on the regulatory motives of reformers should be supplemented with Robertson's exploration of how an increased age of consent also offered protection to girls.</span></li>
<li>Odem, Mary. <em>Delinquent Daughters: Protecting and Policing Female Adolescent Sexuality in the United States, 1885-1920.</em> Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1995.<br /> <span>The first major study of campaigns to raise the age of consent in the United States, this book also examines early prosecutions in California. Odem places the age of consent alongside the treatment of girls in juvenile courts, as opposed to the prosecutions for sexual violence that provide the context in Robertson, and emphasizes how working-class families, not just middle-class authorities, used the law to regulate girls' behavior.</span></li>
<li>Robertson, Stephen. <em>Crimes against Children: Sexual Violence and Legal Culture in New York City, 1880-1960.</em> Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2005.<br /> <span>A detailed history of the prosecution of sexual violence, and how practices and outcomes were changed by shifts in understandings of childhood. Chapters 2, 4, 5, 6 and 9 are focused on cases involving the age of consent, and explore the rise and fall of enforcement of that law.</span></li>
<li>Waites, Matthew. <em>The Age of Consent: Young People, Sexuality and Citizenship.</em> New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2005.<br /> <span>A wide-ranging, sometimes dense, discussion of the theoretical issues raised by the age of consent and of its legislative history in the United Kingdom; best on the second half of the 20th century and on the age of consent for homosexual acts.</span></li>
</ol></div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="teaching-module-item-type-metadata-document-based-question" class="element">
        <h3>Document Based Question</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text"><p>by Sharon Cohen<br />
<em>(Suggested writing time: 50 minutes)</em></p>

<p>The following question is based on the documents included in this module. This question is designed to test your ability to work with and understand historical documents.</p>

<p>Drawing on specific examples from the sources in the module, write a well- organized essay of at least five paragraphs in which you respond to the following prompt:</p>
<ul>
<li>Analyze the causes of the changes and continuities in age of consent laws in Western Europe between 1850 and the present.</li>
</ul>
<p>What additional sources, types of documents, or information would you need to have a more complete view of this topic?</p>

<p>Write an essay that:</p>
<ul>
<li>has a relevant, clear thesis that answers the question, </li>
<li>uses at least six of the documents,</li>
<li>analyzes the documents by grouping them in as many appropriate ways as possible. Does not simply summarize the documents individually, and</li>
<li>takes into account both the sources of the documents and the creators' points of view. You may refer to relevant historical information not mentioned in the documents.</li>
</ul>
</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="teaching-module-item-type-metadata-credits" class="element">
        <h3>Credits</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text"><p>Grateful acknowledgment is made to the following institutions for primary sources:</p>

<ul>
<li><a class="external" href="http://www.avert.org/">AVERTing HIV and Aids</a>,</li>
<li><a class="external" href="http://cmiskp.echr.coe.int/tkp197/view.asp?action=html&documentId=683822&portal=hbkm&source=externalbydocnumber&table=F69A27FD8FB86142BF01C1166DEA398649">European Court of Human Rights</a>,</li>
<li><a class="external" href="http://www.springer.com/social+sciences/criminology/journal/10610">European Journal on Criminal Policy and Research</a>,</li>
<li><a class="external" href="http://www.hup.harvard.edu/">Harvard University Press</a>,</li>
<li><a class="external" href="http://www.oldbaileyonline.org/">The Old Bailey Proceedings Online Project</a>,</li>
<li><a class="external" href="http://www.prenticehall.com/">Prentice-Hall</a>,</li>
<li><a class="external" href="http://prometheusbooks.com/">Prometheus Books</a>,</li>
<li><a class="external" href="http://www.uncpress.unc.edu/">University of North Carolina Press</a>,</li>
<li><a class="external" href="http://vampisoul.com/">Vampi Soul</a>, and</li>
<li><a class="external" href="http://www.vahealth.org/civp/sexualviolence/statutoryrape.asp">Virginia Department of Health: Sexual Violence Prevention</a>.</li>
</ul>

<h3>About the Author</h3>

<p>Stephen Robertson is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of History at the University of Sydney in Australia. He did his undergraduate studies in History and English at the University of Otago in Dunedin, New Zealand, and his Ph.D. at Rutgers University, New Brunswick. Prior to coming to Sydney in 2000, he was a post-doctoral fellow at the American Bar Foundation in Chicago (1997-98), and the JNG Finley Postdoctoral Fellow in the Department of History at George Mason University (1998-99). He also taught for a semester at Massey University in New Zealand. His first book, <em>Crimes against Children: Sexual Violence and Legal Culture in New York City, 1880-1960</em>, explored the prosecution of sex crimes during the period in which new ideas about childhood transformed American laws regarding sexual violence. His current research explores everyday life in Harlem in the 1920s. He teaches courses on childhood and youth in modern America, the history of New York City, and digital history. In 2006, he was awarded a Carrick Australian Award for University Teaching Citation for Outstanding Contributions to Student Learning.</p>

<h3>About the Lesson Plan Author</h3>
<p>Sharon Cohen teaches AP World History and IB Theory of Knowledge at Springbrook High School in Maryland. She regularly presents papers on world history pedagogy at the annual conferences of the World History Association, the American Historical Association, the National Council for Teaching History, and the National Council for the Social Studies, served on the College Board's AP World History Development Committee, contributed articles to the online journal <em>World History Connected</em>, and published curriculum units in world history for the College Board and the online model world history project <em>World History For Us All</em>.</p>
</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
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        <h3>Case Study Institution</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">University of Sydney, Australia</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="teaching-module-item-type-metadata-introduction" class="element">
        <h3>Introduction</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text"><p>In western law, the age of consent is the age at which an individual is treated as capable of consenting to sexual activity. Consequently, any one who has sex with an underage individual, regardless of the circumstances, is guilty of a crime. Narrowly concerned with sexual violence, and with girls, originally, since the 19th century the age of consent has occupied a central place in debates over the nature of childhood, adolescence, and adulthood, and been drawn into campaigns against prostitution and child marriage, struggles to achieve gender and sexual equality, and the response to teenage pregnancy. This module traces the shifting ways that the law has been defined, debated and deployed worldwide and from the Middle Ages to the present.</p>
<p>An age of consent statute first appeared in secular law in 1275 in England as part of the rape law. The statute, Westminster 1, made it a misdemeanor to "ravish" a "maiden within age," whether with or without her consent. The phrase "within age" was interpreted by jurist Sir Edward Coke as meaning the age of marriage, which at the time was 12 years of age.</p>
<p>A 1576 law making it a felony to "unlawfully and carnally know and abuse any woman child under the age of 10 years" was generally interpreted as creating more severe punishments when girls were under 10 years old while retaining the lesser punishment for acts with 10- and 11-year-old girls. Jurist Sir Matthew Hale argued that the age of consent applied to 10- and 11-year-old girls, but most of England's North American colonies adopted the younger age. A small group of Italian and German states that introduced an age of consent in the 16th century also employed 12 years.</p>
<p>An underage girl did not have to physically struggle and resist to the limit of her capacity in order to convince a court of her lack of consent to a sexual act, as older females did; in other words, the age of consent made it easier to prosecute a man who sexually assaulted an underage girl. However, since the age of consent applied in all circumstances, not just in physical assaults, the law also made it impossible for an underage female to consent to sexual activity. There was one exception: a man's acts with his wife, to which rape law, and hence the age of consent, did not apply.</p>
<p>In trials, juries were often unwilling to simply enforce the law. Rather than focusing strictly on age, they made judgments about whether the appearance and behavior of a girl fit their notions of a child and a victim. It was not only that relying solely on age seemed arbitrary to them; at least until the end of the 19th century, age had limited salience in other aspects of daily life. Laws and regulations based on age were uncommon until the 19th century, and consequently so was possession of proof of age or even knowledge of a precise date of birth.</p>
<p>Near the end of the 18th century, other European nations began to enact age of consent laws. The broad context for that change was the emergence of an Enlightenment concept of childhood focused on development and growth. This notion cast children as more distinct in nature from adults than previously imagined, and as particularly vulnerable to harm in the years around puberty. The French Napoleonic code provided the legal context in 1791 when it established an age of consent of 11 years. The age of consent, which applied to boys as well as girls, was increased to 13 years in 1863.</p>
<p>Like France, many other countries, increased the age of consent to 13 in the 19th century. Nations, such as Portugal, Spain, Denmark and the Swiss cantons, that adopted or mirrored the Napoleonic code likewise initially set the age of consent at 10-12 years and then raised it to between 13 and 16 years in the second half of the 19th century. In 1875, England raised the age to 13 years; an act of sexual intercourse with a girl younger than 13 was a felony. In the U.S., each state determined its own criminal law and age of consent ranged from 10 to 12 years of age. U.S. laws did not change in the wake of England's shift. Nor did Anglo-American law apply to boys.</p>
<p>Behind the inconsistency of these different laws was the lack of an obvious age to incorporate into law. Although scientists and physicians had established that menstruation and puberty occurred on average around age 14 in Europe at this time, different individuals experienced it at different ages -- a fluid situation at odds with the arbitrary line drawn by whatever age was incorporated into law.</p>
<p>At the end of 19th century, moral reformers drew the age of consent into campaigns against prostitution. Revelations of child prostitution were central to those campaigns, a situation that resulted, reformers argued, from men taking advantage of the innocence of girls just over the age of consent. W. T. Stead's series of articles entitled, "The Maiden Tribute of Modern Babylon," published in the Pall Mall Gazette in 1885, was the most sensational and influential of these expos&eacute;s.</p>
<p>The outcry it provoked pushed British legislators to raise the age of consent to 16 years, and stirred reformers in the U.S, such as the Women's Christian Temperance Union, the British Empire, and Europe to push for similar legislation. By 1920, Anglo-American legislators had responded by increasing the age of consent to 16 years, and even as high as 18 years.</p>
<p>While those ages were well beyond the normal age of menstruation, proponents justified them on scientific grounds that psychological maturity came later than physiological maturity. They also argued that the age of consent should be aligned with other benchmarks of development, such as the age at which girls could enter into contracts and hold property rights, typically 21 years. Opponents remained focused on physiological maturity, however, and argued that girls in their teens were sufficiently developed not to need legal protection. Moreover, they argued, by late adolescence girls possessed sufficient understanding about how to use the law to blackmail unwary men.</p>
<p>Historians have argued that increasing the age of consent also gave the law a more pronounced regulatory dimension. In practice, these laws were often used to control the behavior of the working-class girls. Yet reformers at the time saw no distinction between protection and regulation: in making it a crime for girls to decide to have sexual intercourse outside marriage, the law protected them from themselves and from the immature understanding that led them to behaviors reformers considered immoral.</p>
<p>In addition to class, the intersection of race and age also gave the law a regulatory character. In India, for example, the prevalence of the custom of child marriage among Hindus led the British colonial authorities to apply the age of consent to married as well as unmarried girls, thereby creating a crime of marital rape that did not exist in British law. The 1860 Indian Penal Code set the age at 10 years; in 1891 the age of consent but not the age of marriage was raised to 12 years. As a result, the age of consent regulated the consummation of marriage, ensuring that it was delayed until an age when Indian girls were considered likely to have begun menstruating.</p>
<p>A furious debate preceded the enactment of the 1891 law, focused in large part on whether the law violated the commitment the British government had made in 1857 not to interfere in native cultures. That Indian law set the age lower than British law reflected ideas that non-white races "matured earlier," in part because of the environments in which they originated. In the U.S., those who opposed resetting the age of consent to 16 made similar arguments about African-Americans, Mexicans, and Italian immigrants. Australian legislators even claimed that white girls living in sub-tropical climates "ripened" into women earlier than those in Europe.</p>
<p>The behavior of underage girls gave support to both proponents and opponents of the increased age of consent. Increasingly living in cities and working in factories, offices and stores, working-class girls with a new freedom from the supervision of family members and neighbors cultivated a flamboyant, sexually expressive style that extended to consensual sexual activity, usually with men only a few years their elders. Their new freedom brought girls danger as well as pleasure: subordination at work and dependence on men for access to leisure, limited their agency and ability to consent, and sometimes exposed them to sexual violence. Girls involved in age of consent prosecutions came in roughly equal numbers from each of those groups.</p>
<p>In the 1930s, support for setting the age of consent at 16 years or older began to weaken. Characterized by growing economic, social, and cultural independence, girls in their teens assumed a place in western societies quite distinct from that of younger children. New concepts of adolescence and specifically of girlhood normalized sexual activity during the teenage years, at least within peer groups, as "sex play" necessary to achieve adult heterosexuality. Emboldened and influenced by such ideas, girls more often talked of being "in love" with the men charged with having sex with them, and expressed sexual desire. Prosecutors and juries increasingly refused to treat such cases as rape.</p>
<p>Legislators, however, did not reduce the legal age of consent. The resulting tension was reflected in slang, most notably the American term "jailbait," dating from the 1930s, that registered cultural recognition of teenage girls as sexually attractive, even sexually active, but legally unavailable. American legislators did amend laws to take account of the offender's age during the 1940s and 1950s as teen culture expanded and female adolescents exercised their sexual autonomy. During and after World War II, if both the male and female were underage (or between two and six years above the age of consent), the punishment was reduced.</p>
<p>By the 1970s, feminist rape law reform campaigns had helped to expand age of consent laws. Aiming to challenge stereotypes of female passivity and growing concern about male victimization, they made it clearer that the laws concerned all youth&mdash;male and female&mdash;and that the laws protected them from exploitation rather than ensuring their virginity. European nations in general did not follow suit. Only Britain, in 2003, revised its legislation, making an act committed by an individual under 18 with one under 16 a separate, lesser offense.</p>
<p>A more broadly adopted element of feminist rape law reform was the application of gender-neutral language: instead of referring to "females" the law referred to any "person." Unchanged, however, was the nature of the act addressed. Age of consent laws applied only to heterosexual intercourse. The new language criminalized acts between underage boys and women, but not those between boys and men. Promoted as a means of formalizing equality between men and women, gender-neutral language won support as a means of protecting boys. The treatment of such cases, however, was not gender neutral and drew upon gender stereotypes. In practice, boys were imagined as sexual agents, not victims, and as sexual agents, the prevailing assumption was that they would not be harmed by sexual acts with adult women.</p>
<p>In the U.S., the Supreme Court ruled that it was constitutional to apply the age of consent only to girls. The ruling found a new, "modern" basis for the law: the consequences of pregnancy for females. Although out of line with a broad shift toward formal legal equality between males and females, the decision fit the circumstances of the small number of cases still being prosecuted. And despite this ruling, gender-neutral laws were still enacted around the country.</p>
<p>This debate foreshadowed a new link between the law and teenage pregnancy in the 1990s. Conservatives seeking to control adolescent sexuality joined with welfare reform activists. They promoted claims that the enforcement of the age of consent could prevent teenage motherhood (and rising welfare costs) that resulted from girls' exploitation by adult men. Few cases actually fit that pattern, but campaigns to publicize and enforce the law on that basis were implemented in at least 10 states.</p>
<p>At the end of the 20th century, outside the U.S., age of consent laws were expanded to include same-sex acts, due in part to growing tolerance of homosexuality and desire to reach those at risk of AIDS. In the first half of the 20th century, all the European nations, other than Italy and Turkey, that had followed the Napoleonic code in treating heterosexual and homosexual acts alike had recriminalized homosexual acts, either establishing a total ban or an age of consent higher than that for heterosexual acts. In the last quarter of the century, arguments that boys developed later and needed to be older to appreciate the social consequences of homosexual acts began to fade.</p>
<p>European nations began establishing a uniform age of consent for heterosexual and homosexual acts in the 1970s. Under pressure from the European Commission on Human Rights, the former Soviet states and the United Kingdom were the last to revise their legislation at the beginning of the 21st century. In 2003, New South Wales became the final Australian state to adopt a uniform law. In that same year, a U.S. Supreme Court decision decriminalized consensual sodomy, opening the way for the invalidation of unequal laws, a process started in 2005. As of 2007, Canada, Cyprus, and the British territories of Gibraltar and Guernsey were the only western nations without a uniform age of consent for heterosexual and homosexual acts.</p>
<p>More than 800 years after the first recorded age of consent laws, the one constant is the lack of consistency. Laws around the world define the socially appropriate age of consent anywhere from 13 to 18. Some differentiate between heterosexual and homosexual acts while others do not. Some apply to young men as well as young women and others remained focused on the lives and actions of girls. And beyond the legislation lies the world of practice, an even more complex story.</p></div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="teaching-module-item-type-metadata-case-study-author" class="element">
        <h3>Case Study Author</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">Stephen Robertson</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="teaching-module-item-type-metadata-strategies" class="element">
        <h3>Strategies</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text"><p>The primary sources in this module have been chosen to highlight the shifting ways that age of consent laws have been defined, debated and deployed in Western nations over time. To make sense of these documents, it is important to recognize the historically contingent nature of childhood and girlhood: the answer to who is a child or girl differs depending upon the historical period. Bodies are perceived differently and are different to the extent that the average age of puberty has fallen; psychological development and understanding are not always important in definitions of childhood.</p>
<p>It is also important to recognize two tensions within age of consent laws. First, the arbitrary nature of the legal category of age was at odds with fluidity of growth: while the law treated all underage girls as equally mature (or immature), in practice judges and juries confronted the fact that they were not. Second, the age of consent had a dual nature, both protective, in the sense that it removed the need for a girl to show resistance to charge rape, and regulatory, in that it precluded an underage girl from consenting. Broader questions about the law also underpin the issue of the age of consent. Can the law change people's ideas? Can the law stop individuals from having sex? What role do unenforced laws play in shaping cultural attitudes and social behavior?</p>
<p>These sources track the shifting meanings of the age of consent. The Arrowsmith trial demonstrates its role in rape law and the gap between the statute and legal practice. The "Maiden Tribute" articles connect rape and prostitution, making clear how the age of consent became part of anti-prostitution campaigns. The WCTU petition also refers to sexual assault, but incorporates circumstances in which girls consent to their own ruin, highlighting the new regulatory arguments for the law that came to dominate campaigns to increase the age.</p>
<p>Yajnik's speech links the age of consent and marriage and shows the different forms regulatory arguments could take in colonial contexts. Texas legislators' grounds for opposing an increased age highlight the divergent understandings of childhood that existed even when the age of consent was being raised. Morris Ploscowe's later commentary on the law in many ways echoes those arguments, but does so within a new framework, the modern concept of adolescence, that provides them with expert backing. The notion of jailbait invoked by Andre Williams' song speaks to a recognition in popular culture of the same tensions between the sexualization of adolescents and existence of the law that Ploscowe identifies.</p>
<p>Against the backdrop of these tensions, the U.S. Supreme Court decision again shifts the grounds for the age of consent, this time to the consequences of sex for girls;specifically pregnancy. The Virginia billboard builds on that argument, linking the age of consent to public health and positioning the law as a means of changing behavior. The table of ages used in western laws highlights the historical and contemporary variations in age of consent laws, and the comparatively higher ages employed in the Anglo-American laws relative to Europe. Finally, the decision in the Sutherland case highlights a further shift in the meaning of the age of consent, to encompass in not only boys, but also same-sex acts.</p>
<h3>Discussion Questions</h3>
<ul>
<li>What justifications for the age of consent do different sources offer? What arguments against the age of consent, or for a lower age of consent, do different sources offer? What do those arguments suggest about why the age of consent has increased since the 19th century? What do those arguments suggest about why there is so much variation in the age used in the laws of different nations? What is the relationship between age of consent laws and changing notions of girlhood and adolescence?</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li>What issues have been connected to age of consent laws in these documents? What was the basis of those connections?</li>
<li>Does the age of consent primarily protect or regulate children, especially girls', sexuality? Is the answer different at different historical moments or in different cultures?</li>
</ul>
<ul>
</ul>
<ul>
<li>Why did the age of consent not apply to boys in Anglo-American cultures until the 1970s? Why did it not apply to same-sex acts in those cultures until the 1960s, and not at an equal age until 2000? Is the age of consent still gendered? Does it still apply primarily to girls?</li>
</ul></div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="teaching-module-item-type-metadata-lesson-plan" class="element">
        <h3>Lesson Plan</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text"><h3>Lesson Plan: Childhood Seen Through Age of Consent Laws</h3>
<p>by Sharon Cohen</p>
<p><strong>Time Estimated:</strong> two 45-minute classes</p>
<h3>Objectives</h3>
<ol>
<li>Describe and analyze changes and continuities in Western childhood during the 19th and 20th centuries.</li>
<li>Define "age of consent" and analyze age of consent laws to see continuity and change over time in dealing with age, gender, and context.</li>
<li>Analyze point and view and purpose of historical documents, including audience, author, place, and time period.</li>
<li>Compare laws to other sources (including articles, commentaries, and speeches) to analyze changing definitions of childhood over time and place.</li>
<li>Analyze the influence of Enlightenment and other ideologies on age of consent laws.</li>
<li>Discuss how historians study and find evidence of the developing concept of childhood.</li>
</ol>

<h3>Materials</h3>
<ul>
<li>Sufficient copies of sources:<br /> <a class="external" href="http://chnm.gmu.edu/cyh/teaching-modules/230?section=primarysources&source=37">The Trial of Stephen Arrowsmith</a><br /> <a class="external" href="http://chnm.gmu.edu/cyh/teaching-modules/230?section=primarysources&source=38">"The Violation of Virgins"</a><br /> <a class="external" href="http://chnm.gmu.edu/cyh/teaching-modules/230?section=primarysources&source=39">Petition to Raise the Age of Consent</a><br /> <a class="external" href="http://chnm.gmu.edu/cyh/teaching-modules/230?section=primarysources&source=40">"Review of the Age-of-Consent Legislation in Texas"</a><br /> <a class="external" href="http://chnm.gmu.edu/cyh/teaching-modules/230?section=primarysources&source=45">Adolescent Sexual Experimentation Should Not Be a Crime</a><br /> <a class="external" href="http://chnm.gmu.edu/cyh/teaching-modules/230?section=primarysources&source=46"><em>Jailbait</em></a><br /> <a class="external" href="http://chnm.gmu.edu/cyh/teaching-modules/230?section=primarysources&source=47">U.S. Supreme Court Decision Justifying Gender-Based Age of Consent Laws</a><br /> </li>
<li>Copies of the <a class="external" href="http://www.representingchildhood.pitt.edu/medieval_child.htm">"Childhood in Medieval England"</a> article</li>
<li>Copies of the <a class="external" href="http://chnm.gmu.edu/cyh/teaching-modules/230?section=primarysources&source=207">"Age of Menarche in Norway"</a> chart</li>
<li>Copies of the <a class="external" href="http://chnm.gmu.edu/cyh/archive/files/apparts_b60cd02284.pdf">APPARTS worksheet</a> 
 </li>
<li>Poster paper, magic markers</li>
</ul>

<h3>Day One</h3>

<p><em>Hook (10 minutes)</em><br />
To get the students thinking about what childhood means, have them write a short description of their daily lives when they were eight. Then, have them share their descriptions with each other in groups of two or three.</p>

<p><em>In-class Reading (25 minutes)</em><br />
Explain to the students that they will be comparing their childhood to children's lives in medieval England. Have the students read the "Childhood in Medieval England" article, either individually or in pairs. Then, ask the students the following questions:</p>        
<ul>
<li>How was children's work life similar and different from today's?</li>
<li>How was children's leisure time similar to and different from today's?</li>
<li>In general, how were people's understanding of the boundary between childhood and adulthood similar to and different from our understanding of that boundary today?</li>
</ul>

<p><em>Lecture (10 minutes)</em><br />
Give students a brief lecture to provide them with a basic understanding of age of consent laws: what they are, why they were made, and how they can indirectly define childhood by setting a boundary between childhood and adulthood. The purpose of the lecture is to prepare the students to read the <a class="external" href="http://chnm.gmu.edu/cyh/teaching-modules/230?section=introduction">introductory article</a> at home before the next class; the first paragraph of the article is a good source for this lecture.</p>

<p><em>Homework</em><br /> 
Assign students background reading from the <a class="external" href="http://chnm.gmu.edu/cyh/teaching-modules/230">introductory article</a>. You may also wish to have them respond in two to three paragraphs to the following prompt: "What should the age of consent be in America, today? Defend your answer, citing at least three issues discussed in the reading."</p>

<h3>Day Two</h3>

<p><em>Share (5 minutes)</em><br />
Have students share the specific age they selected, as well as their findings on historical age of consent laws from the reading.</p>

<p><em>Small-Group Work (30 minutes)</em><br />
This activity helps students further understand the various issues around age of consent laws, as well as give them a chance to practice their document analysis skills. Break up the class into groups of two to three students. Assign half of the student groups all three documents from group A (below) and the remaining student groups all three documents from group B.</p>
        
<ul>
<li><strong>Group A</strong><br /> Source 2: <a class="external" href="http://chnm.gmu.edu/cyh/teaching-modules/230?section=primarysources&source=38">"The Violation of Virgins" Newspaper Article</a><br /> Source 7: <a class="external" href="http://chnm.gmu.edu/cyh/teaching-modules/230?section=primarysources&source=47">U.S. Supreme Court Decision Justifying Gender-Based Age of Consent Laws Legal Document</a><br /> Source 9: <a class="external" href="http://chnm.gmu.edu/cyh/teaching-modules/230?section=primarysources&source=23">"Isn't she a little young?" Billboard</a></li>
<li><strong>Group B</strong><br /> Source 3: <a class="external" href="http://chnm.gmu.edu/cyh/teaching-modules/230?section=primarysources&source=39">Petition to Raise the Age of Consent</a><br /> Source 5: <a class="external" href="http://chnm.gmu.edu/cyh/teaching-modules/230?section=primarysources&source=40"> Increased Age of Consent Speech</a><br /> Source 6: <a class="external" href="http://chnm.gmu.edu/cyh/teaching-modules/230?section=primarysources&source=45">Adolescent Sexual Experimentation Should Not Be a Crime Commentary</a></li>
</ul>

<p>Have the students analyze their sources to find the point of view and purpose in each source. The students then should identify how the sources show a continuity or change in the age of consent law for that country, region, or colony.  Each group should fill out an APPARTS worksheet for each document as part of this analysis.  Then, have each group jigsaw share their findings with a group that analyzed the other set of documents to share their findings with each other.</p>

<p><em>Lecture/discussion (10 minutes)</em><br />
 To help students understand how the Enlightenment influenced these changes, have the students read this short excerpt from <a class="external" href="http://chnm.gmu.edu/cyh/primary-sources/216">Rousseau's <em>Emile</em></a>, or read it to them aloud (along with the background information). In a short discussion, have them explain how these Enlightenment ideas might relate to changes in age of consent laws.</p>

<h3>Day Three (Optional Activities)</h3>

<p><em>Data Analysis (25 minutes):</em><br />
This activity will help students see the major changes and continuities in age of consent laws. Divide the students into groups of two. Pass out copies of two secondary sources to each group: <a class="external" href="http://chnm.gmu.edu/cyh/teaching-modules/230?section=primarysources&source=24">Source 10, the Age of Consent Laws Table</a>, and the <a class="external" href="http://chnm.gmu.edu/cyh/teaching-modules/230?section=primarysources&source=207">Age of Menarche in Norway chart</a>. Explain to the class that menarche is a female's first menstrual cycle, and is often considered the beginning of puberty. Before beginning the analysis, ask the students the following two questions, either in a short discussion or in pairs:</p> 
<ul>
<li>Are these primary or secondary sources? How do you know?</li>
<li>Who was the author of each? What do you think his or her purpose was in creating this source?</li>
</ul>

<p>Next, ask the students to analyze the two sources by answer the following questions. Tell them to link their answers to specific evidence from the documents and readings they have encountered over the past two days.</p> 
<ul>
<li>Describe the trends you see in the legal age of consent. What are their changes over time? Are there continuities?</li>
<li>Describe the trends. Do you see in the age at which puberty begins? Are their changes over time? Continuities?</li>
<li>What political, economic, and social forces might have led to the changes and/or continuities in the age of consent?</li>
<li>Why might the changes and continuities in the age of consent vary from one region to another?</li>
<li>What might have caused the age of puberty to change over time? (Note to teacher: many scholars believe that this is only due to improvements in nutrition during childhood, possibly during the prenatal period, too.)</li>
<li>What might be the political, economic, and social effects of changes you see in <em>both</em> sets of data?</li>
</ul>

<p><em>Writing Assignment</em><br />
Finally, have the students write a thesis statement (1-2 sentences) to address the prompt:</p>
<ul>
<li>Analyze the changes and continuities in age of consent laws in Western Europe between 1850 and the present. Be sure to include <em>causes</em> of changes and/or continuities in your thesis.</li>
</ul>

<p><em>Socratic Circle (20 minutes)</em><br /> 
This activity helps students understand the political and social implications of age of consent laws. Using a Socratic Circle, have students discuss how a state-defined concept of childhood could affect minority groups and/or colonized peoples. Ask the students to re-read <a class="external" href="http://chnm.gmu.edu/cyh/teaching-modules/230?section=primarysources&source=40">Source 5 (Increased Age of Consent Speech)</a>, then discuss the following questions:</p> 
<ul>
<li>Why were British officials anxious about changing the age of consent laws? What could the potential consequences of these changes have been?</li>
<li>How might an 11-year old Hindu girl have reacted to the change in the law? How might her mother have reacted? Why?</li>
<li>How might Muslims and/or Christians living in India have responded to the changes in laws? What implications might their reactions (vs. Hindu reactions) have for the British colonial government?</li>
<li>How might changes in these laws affect the relationship between a state and minority groups living in that state (not a colony)? Use specific examples, such as Indian immigrants in England, Jews in Germany, or Africans in the United States.</li>
</ul>

<h3>Differentiation</h3>
<p><em>Advanced Students</em><br />
Have students evaluate the use of age of consent laws <em>by historians</em> (i.e. historiography) as a tool to trace the development of the concept of childhood and other stages of the lifespan (e.g., teenage years). Students should write a paper or create a presentation that responds to the following questions:</p>
<ul>
<li>Should historians use age of consent laws to trace the changes and continuities in the concept of childhood and/or teenage years? Why or why not?</li>
<li>What are the strengths and weaknesses of this approach?</li>
<li>What other types of information should they also examine?</li>
<li>What viewpoints are omitted by focusing on the legal age of consent? How could historians better understand those viewpoints? What types of documents would help in this effort?</li>
</ul>
<p><em>Less Advanced Students</em><br />
Help students understand what they are reading by creating a vocabulary list, and/or using shorter excerpts of the articles and documents rather than entire excerpts. Create scaffolding worksheets to help students record the changes and continuities they find in the documents; e.g., providing a grid for students to record the political, economic, social, cultural changes in each document.</p></div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="teaching-module-item-type-metadata-primary-sources" class="element">
        <h3>Primary Sources</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 45, 46, 47, 48, 23, 24, 207</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
        </div><!-- end element-set --><div class="item-file application-pdf"><a class="download-file" href="/files/download/144/fullsize">APPARTS.pdf</a></div>]]></description>
      <pubDate>Sun, 12 Apr 2009 18:20:29 +0000</pubDate>
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      <title><![CDATA[Chinese Mother Goose Rhymes [Literary Excerpts]]]></title>
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                                    <div class="element-text"><em>Chinese Mother Goose Rhymes</em> [Literary Excerpts]</div>
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                                    <div class="element-text"><p>Isaac Taylor Headland (1859-1942), a resident of Beijing and a scholar at Peking (Beijing) University, joined other contemporaries interested in both popular culture and folklore in collecting and transcribing Chinese children's rhymes. The rhymes were shared by nurse-maids who cared for the children of expatriates living in the city as well as through interviews of kids who sang in the streets and neighborhoods of the city and surrounding region. The text, which includes both English and Chinese versions of the rhymes as well as photographs, offers an interesting perspective on popular culture, social roles related to gender and family, as well as the material culture of daily life in turn-of-the-century China.</p></div>
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                                    <div class="element-text">Li Han and Hsü Tzu-kuang</div>
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                                    <div class="element-text">Headland, Isaac Taylor. <em>Chinese Mother Goose Rhymes</em>. New York: Fleming H. Revell Co., 1900, p. 15, 60–1, 146–7.</div>
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                                    <div class="element-text"><h3>"Grandpa Feeds Baby"</h3>
<p>Grandpa holds the baby,<br /> He's sitting on his knee<br /> Eating mutton dumplings<br /> With vinegar and tea.<br /> Then grandpa says to baby,<br /> "When you have had enough,<br /> You'll be a saucy baby<br /> And treat your grandpa rough."</p>
<hr />
<h3>"The Ungrateful Son"</h3>
<p>The tail of one magpie's as long as another,<br /> He married a wife and he gave up his mother,<br /> When asked by his mother to buy her some cake,<br /> He wanted to know how much money  twould take;<br /> When his wife wanted pears he saddled his beast,<br /> And started to market to buy her a feast;<br /> He took off the peeling with very great airs,<br /> And asked her politely to have a few pears.</p>
<hr />
<h3>"The Mischievous Sister-in-Law"</h3>
<p>Oh the pumpkin red, on the gourd decayed,<br /> I am my father's mischievous maid;<br /> I am my brother's dear little sister;<br /> I am my sister-in-law's fly-blister.<br /> Father, when I marry, what will you give?<br /> A box and a ward-robe you shall receive.<br /> Mother, when I marry, what will you bring?<br /> A little work-basket full of everything.<br /> Brother, when I marry, what will come from you?<br /> A fancy cloth towel; think that will do?<br /> My happiness, sister, you will not mar?<br /> I'll give a broken bottle and a little smashed jar,<br /> And send you, you nuisance, away very far.</p></div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="document-item-type-metadata-related-primary-sources" class="element">
        <h3>Related Primary Sources</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
        </div><!-- end element-set -->]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 26 Mar 2009 05:46:25 +0000</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title><![CDATA[The Chinese Boy and Girl [Literary Excerpt]]]></title>
      <link>https://cyh.rrchnm.org/items/show/227</link>
      <description><![CDATA[<div class="element-set">
    <h2>Dublin Core</h2>
        <div id="dublin-core-title" class="element">
        <h3>Title</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text"><em>The Chinese Boy and Girl</em> [Literary Excerpt]</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-subject" class="element">
        <h3>Subject</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-description" class="element">
        <h3>Description</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text"><p>Issac Taylor Headland (1859-1942), a resident of Beijing and a scholar at Peking (Beijing) University, joined other contemporaries interested in both popular culture and folklore in his own study of daily life in China. He was particularly concerned with the collection and transcription of Chinese children's rhymes. Readings from his texts offer a look at a Westerner's own perspective on children's culture and family life as well as the complexities of cross-cultural exchange. Headland's voice offers an example of a global encounter at a moment of high imperialism – indeed, these texts were published in the immediate wake of the dramatic Boxer Uprising and siege of foreign legations that occurred in Beijing during the summer of 1900.</p></div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-creator" class="element">
        <h3>Creator</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">Isaac Taylor Headland</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-source" class="element">
        <h3>Source</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">Headland, Isaac Taylor. <em>The Chinese Boy and Girl</em>. New York: Fleming H. Revell, 1901, 5. [Full text available  at the <a class="external" href="http://etext.virginia.edu/toc/modeng/public/HeaChin.html">University of Virginia online etext archive</a>.]</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-publisher" class="element">
        <h3>Publisher</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-date" class="element">
        <h3>Date</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">2009-03-26</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-contributor" class="element">
        <h3>Contributor</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">Susan Fernsebner</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-rights" class="element">
        <h3>Rights</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-relation" class="element">
        <h3>Relation</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">221, 228</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-format" class="element">
        <h3>Format</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">text</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-language" class="element">
        <h3>Language</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">en</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
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        <h3>Type</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
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        <h3>Identifier</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Coverage</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
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    <h2>Additional Item Metadata</h2>
        <div id="additional-item-metadata-transcription" class="element">
        <h3>Transcription</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-local-url" class="element">
        <h3>Local URL</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-online-submission" class="element">
        <h3>Online Submission</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-posting-consent" class="element">
        <h3>Posting Consent</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-submission-consent" class="element">
        <h3>Submission Consent</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-process-edit" class="element">
        <h3>Process Edit</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-process-annotate" class="element">
        <h3>Process Annotate</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-process-review" class="element">
        <h3>Process Review</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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            <div id="additional-item-metadata-website-image" class="element">
        <h3>Website Image</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-analyzing-sources" class="element">
        <h3>Analyzing Sources</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-publisher" class="element">
        <h3>Publisher</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-creator" class="element">
        <h3>Creator</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
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        <h3>Source</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Date</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
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        <h3>Rights</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-bibliographic-citation" class="element">
        <h3>Bibliographic Citation</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-provenance" class="element">
        <h3>Provenance</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-citation" class="element">
        <h3>Citation</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-spatial-coverage" class="element">
        <h3>Spatial Coverage</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-rights-holder" class="element">
        <h3>Rights Holder</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-temporal-coverage" class="element">
        <h3>Temporal Coverage</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
        </div><!-- end element-set --><div class="element-set">
    <h2>Document Item Type Metadata</h2>
        <div id="document-item-type-metadata-text" class="element">
        <h3>Text</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text"><p>No thorough study of Chinese child life can be made until the wall of Chinese exclusiveness is broken down and the homes of the East are thrown open to the people of the West. Glimpses of that life, however, are available, sufficient in number and character to give a fairly good idea of what it must be. The playground is by no means always hidden, lease of all when it is the street. The Chinese nurse brings her Chinese rhymes, stories, and games into the foreigner's home for the amusement of its little ones. Chinese kindergarten methods and appliances have no superior in their ingenuity and their ability to interest, as well as to instruct. In the matter of traveling shows and jugglers also, no country is better supplied, and these are chiefly for the entertainment of the little ones.</p>
	<p>To the careful observer of these different phases it becomes apparent that the Chinese child is well supplied with methods of exercise and amusement, also that he has much in common with the children of other lands. A large collection of toys shows many duplicates of those common in the West, and from the nursery rhymes of at least two out of the eighteen provinces it appears that the Chinese nursery is rich in Mother Goose. As a companion to the "Chinese Mother Goose," this book seeks to show that the same sunlight fills the homes of both East and West. If it also leads their far-away mates to look upon the Chinese Boy and Girl as real little folk, human like themselves, and thus think more kindly of them, its mission will have been accomplished.</p></div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="document-item-type-metadata-related-primary-sources" class="element">
        <h3>Related Primary Sources</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
        </div><!-- end element-set -->]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 26 Mar 2009 05:45:32 +0000</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title><![CDATA[Joyous Celebration at the New Year [Image]]]></title>
      <link>https://cyh.rrchnm.org/items/show/226</link>
      <description><![CDATA[<div class="element-set">
    <h2>Dublin Core</h2>
        <div id="dublin-core-title" class="element">
        <h3>Title</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">Joyous Celebration at the New Year [Image]</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-subject" class="element">
        <h3>Subject</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-description" class="element">
        <h3>Description</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text"><p>This image offers an artistic view of a household celebrating the New Year's holiday. Here we find children at play amidst a scene of domestic joy and prosperity for an elite family of the Qing dynasty (1644-1911). The <a class="external" href="http://www.npm.gov.tw/exh98/newyear/img_item_o3_en.html">detail of the image</a> is rich in its representation of material culture, shared domestic space, as well as visions of play and the culinary endeavor of a grand feast. We might inventory the different kinds of toys that can be seen here and consider the ways in which the children of that day imagined and made use of them. On the right side of the main outdoor courtyard, for example, we see two children at play with what seems a puppet hanging from a pole. The figure may have represented a character from a famous tale or historic play. What might children have gained from play with such kinds of figures? Notice also the contrast in this image between the many children at play and those who are also engaged in a parallel act of serving their elders (see, in particular, the figures at the table.) What might this shared imagery of play and respectful or filial service to parents have meant to those viewing the image during the Qing dynasty itself? It is helpful to consider the ways in which these specific scenes of play overlap with those representing other kinds of household relationships and roles. </p></div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-creator" class="element">
        <h3>Creator</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-source" class="element">
        <h3>Source</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">Yao Wen-han, &quot;Joyous Celebration at the New Year,&quot; Collection of the National Palace Museum, &lt;a class=&quot;external&quot; href=&quot;http://www.npm.gov.tw/exh98/newyear/img_item_o3_en.html&quot;&gt;http://www.npm.gov.tw/exh98/newyear/img_item_o3_en.html&lt;/a&gt; (accessed May 12, 2009). </div>
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        <h3>Publisher</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Date</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-contributor" class="element">
        <h3>Contributor</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">Susan Fernsebner</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-rights" class="element">
        <h3>Rights</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-relation" class="element">
        <h3>Relation</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">221</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-format" class="element">
        <h3>Format</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">image/jpeg</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-language" class="element">
        <h3>Language</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">en</div>
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        <h3>Type</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Identifier</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Coverage</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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    <h2>Additional Item Metadata</h2>
        <div id="additional-item-metadata-transcription" class="element">
        <h3>Transcription</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Local URL</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-online-submission" class="element">
        <h3>Online Submission</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
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        <h3>Posting Consent</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-submission-consent" class="element">
        <h3>Submission Consent</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Process Edit</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Process Annotate</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Process Review</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Analyzing Sources</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Publisher</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Creator</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Source</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Date</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Rights</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Bibliographic Citation</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Provenance</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Citation</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Spatial Coverage</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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            <div id="additional-item-metadata-rights-holder" class="element">
        <h3>Rights Holder</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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            <div id="additional-item-metadata-temporal-coverage" class="element">
        <h3>Temporal Coverage</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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    <h2>Still Image Item Type Metadata</h2>
        <div id="still-image-item-type-metadata-physical-dimensions" class="element">
        <h3>Physical Dimensions</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">82.4 x 55 cm</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="still-image-item-type-metadata-image-description" class="element">
        <h3>Image Description</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">Hanging scroll, ink and colors on paper.</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="still-image-item-type-metadata-related-primary-sources" class="element">
        <h3>Related Primary Sources</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
        </div><!-- end element-set --><div class="item-file image-jpeg"><a class="download-file" href="/files/download/160/fullsize"><img src="/files/display/160/square_thumbnail" class="thumb" alt="Joyous Celebration at the New Year [Image]" width="250" height="250"/>
</a></div>]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 26 Mar 2009 05:44:30 +0000</pubDate>
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