HIST 466(S) Imagining Urban America, Three Case Studies: Boston, Chicago, and L.A. (Same as American Studies 364)
This course will explore the social, economic, and cultural lives of three cities, each of which at its zenith seemed to contemporaries to represent definitive aspects of "American"
development. We will begin with Boston-the country's first "big" city and the nominal
capital of Puritan New England-in the colonial and early national periods. From there we
will move to Chicago, the transportation and commercial hub of the emerging national
economy in the nineteenth century. Finally we will turn to Los Angeles, "The City of
Dreams" and the center of the popular entertainment industry in the twentieth century. In
each case, drawing on a variety of sources, we will examine the city's origins, the factors
that promoted its growth, and the distinctive society it engendered. Then we will consider
some of the city's cultural expressions-expressions that seem to characterize not only
changing the nature of urban life, but the particular meanings each city gave to the nation's
experience at the time. What made these cities seem simultaneously, as they did, so alluring
and so threatening to the fabric of national community and identity?
Format: seminar. Requirements: two short papers and a longer essay analyzing selected primary texts; there will be no hour test or final exam.
Enrollment limit: 20 (expected: 15). Preference given to History majors.
Group F
Hour: DALZELL