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Sowing the seeds of victory: National wartime gardening programs in the United States during World War I.

机译:播下胜利的种子:第一次世界大战期间美国的国家战时园艺计划。

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摘要

This dissertation offers a history of national gardening programs on the American home front during World War I. Concern about America's food system linked agricultural and gardening to national security. Three programs are considered: The National War Garden Commission (NWGC), the United States School Garden Army (USSGA) and the Woman's Land Army of America (WLAA). A fourth case study serves as a precursor; it discusses the Pennsylvania School of Horticulture for Women (Ambler), which provided new educational and employment opportunities for women in agriculture.;The NWGC created the Liberty/Victory Garden program during World War I, which called millions of American's to become "soldiers of the soil." It promoted and understood gardening as a way to accomplish an array of Progressive reform agendas.;"Every boy and every girl ... should be a producer. The growing of plants ... should therefore become an integral part of the school program." With these words, the federal Bureau of Education launched the USSGA, targeting urban youth. An early federal effort to nationalize a curriculum, it represented a departure from policies that focused such efforts on rural youth. By war's end, more than two million youth sewed as "soldiers of the soil.";The WLAA mobilized nearly 20,000 mostly white and college-educated middle class women as agricultural laborers during the war. Their work challenged widely held perceptions about appropriate roles for women.;The programs did not simply seek to increase food production. Proponents saw an opportunity to instill a traditional American "producer" ethic in an urban population increasingly influenced by consumerism, and increasingly removed from its food system.;All demonstrate how Americans mediated competing urban and rural values during a period of transformation. Values attributed to America's rural past were recast and articulated in an urban milieu of gardening.;This dissertation draws upon government publications produced by the wartime gardening programs, including reports, bulletins, gardening guides, curriculum and posters. Newspaper and magazine articles from the period were also used. It contributes to ongoing discussions in a range of disciplines surrounding the history of American cultural life, Progressivism, agriculture, educational policy, women's work and food studies.
机译:这篇论文提供了第一次世界大战期间在美国家庭前线进行国家园艺计划的历史。对美国粮食系统的关注使农业和园艺与国家安全联系在一起。考虑了三个程序:国家战争花园委员会(NWGC),美国学校花园军(USSGA)和美国女子土地军(WLAA)。第四个案例研究是先例。它讨论了宾夕法尼亚州妇女园艺学院(Ambler),该学院为农业妇女提供了新的教育和就业机会。NWGC在第一次世界大战期间创建了自由/胜利花园计划,该计划呼吁数百万美国人成为“索马里的士兵”。土壤。”它促进和理解园艺是完成一系列渐进式改革议程的一种方式。“每个男孩和每个女孩……都应该是生产者。种植植物……因此应该成为学校计划的组成部分。 ”用这些话,联邦教育局启动了针对城市青年的USSGA。联邦政府早期对课程进行国有化的努力表明,它偏离了针对农村青年的政策。到战争结束时,有超过200万青年人被缝制为“土壤的士兵”。在战争期间,WLAA动员了将近20,000名大部分是白人和受过大学教育的中产阶级妇女担任农业工人。他们的工作挑战了人们普遍认为的对妇女的适当作用的认识。这些计划并不仅仅是为了增加粮食产量。支持者看到了一个机会,可以在日益受到消费主义影响,并逐渐脱离其食品体系的城市人口中灌输美国传统的“生产者”道德。所有这些都表明,美国人在转型时期如何介导了城乡竞争的价值观念。在城市园艺环境中重塑和表达了归因于美国农村过去的价值观。本论文借鉴了战时园艺计划产生的政府出版物,包括报告,公告,园艺指南,课程和海报。还使用了该时期的报纸和杂志文章。它有助于围绕美国文化生活,进步主义,农业,教育政策,妇女工作和食品研究等一系列学科的持续讨论。

著录项

  • 作者

    Hayden-Smith, Rose.;

  • 作者单位

    University of California, Santa Barbara.;

  • 授予单位 University of California, Santa Barbara.;
  • 学科 American Studies.;History United States.;Womens Studies.;Political Science Public Administration.;Sociology Public and Social Welfare.;Sustainability.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2010
  • 页码 347 p.
  • 总页数 347
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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