Understanding History and Society through Images, 1776-1914

CONTENTS OF CURRICULUM UNIT 14.01.02

  1. Unit Guide
  1. Overview
  2. Rationale
  3. School Demographics
  4. Historical Background
  5. Art Historical Background
  6. Strategies
  7. Classroom Activities
  8. Suggested Paintings
  9. Resources
  10. Appendix
  11. Notes

American Genre Painting: Visual Representations of Slavery and Emancipation, 1850-1870

Tara Ann Carter

Published September 2014

Tools for this Unit:

Guide Entry to 14.01.02

This unit seeks to investigate the lives of African-Americans directly before and after the Civil War. Specifically, the genre paintings selected span the decades of 1850 to 1870, thereby representing a tumultuous period of American History, from which students can glean a strong visual understanding of what life looked like for black people, while simultaneously unpacking the idealized historical perspectives on antebellum and postbellum perceptions of slave and freedman life. By looking at a selection of twenty-five images created between the specified years, students can also find a thematic and visual vocabulary for understanding the structures of power in the United States. This curriculum unit is a project of fostering narrative visualization throughout the history of African-Americans. This unit will apply new techniques and strategies to integrate these images into the classroom in an authentic way, such as close analysis of artwork and connections between visual representation and written historical texts.

(Developed for African American History, grade 9; recommended for African American History and American History, grades 9-12)

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