FAITH, FRAUEN, AND THE FORMATION OF AN ETHNIC IDENTITY: GERMAN LUTHERAN WOMEN IN SOUTH AND CENTRAL TEXAS, 1831-1890
This dissertation argues that German Lutheran women living in south and central Texas from 1831 to 1890 involved themselves in family, church, and community to reconstruct their conservative notions of society in a frontier setting. Going beyond the traditional interpretations of kinder, kuche, und...
Main Author: | Knarr, Mary |
---|---|
Other Authors: | Gregg Cantrell |
Format: | Others |
Language: | en |
Published: |
Texas Christian University
2009
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://etd.tcu.edu/etdfiles/available/etd-03262009-073207/ |
Similar Items
-
BATLLISMO AND THE YANKEES: THE UNITED STATES AND URUGUAY, 1903 - 1929
by: Knarr, James Charles
Published: (2009) -
From Old South to Modern West: Fort Worth's Celebration of the Texas State Centennial and Shaping and Urban Identity and Image
by: Olmstead, Jacob Wayne
Published: (2011) -
Imagining Criminals: Criminological Discourses and the Construction of Crime in Lima, 1890-1934
by: Huertas Castillo, Liz Elvira
Published: (2010) -
Acts of Faith: Reading, Rhetoric, and the Creation of Communal Belief in Sixteenth-Century England
by: Hermanson, Amy K.
Published: (2009) -
Granbury's Texas Brigade, C.S.A.: The Color Brigade of the Army
by: Lundberg, John Richard
Published: (2007)