Book
Poverty disease and illiteracy had long bedeviled the U.S. South even before the agricultural depression of the 1920s became subsumed within the Great Depression of the 1930s. The essays collected in this volume examine a variety of responses to economic depression and poverty. They recount specific battles for civil educational and labor rights and explore the challenges and alternatives to the corporate South in the post World War II agribusiness era. Scholars from both the U.S. and Europe assess how far the South has come in the last century what forces from the Sears Roebuck Catalog to the Civil Rights Movement have been at work in its transformation and whether the regions reincarnation as the Sunbelt has lifted the burdens of southern history. Contributors assess labor strikes and demonstrations that have not always found a place in histories of the region and revisit and reassess key southern figures from Erskine Caldwell and James Agee to Albert Gore and Lyndon Johnson. They draw our attention to neglected writers whose representations of poverty deserve more critical attention and they provide critical analysis of contemporary authors and filmmakers. lsquoThe arguments in these essays are insistently interdisciplinary both in themselves and in their conjunctions. Poverty and Progress is a significant contribution to the new Southern Studies.rsquo Richard Godden author of Fictions of Labor and editor of Reading Southern Poverty between the Wars «
Boeklezers.nl is a network for social reading. We help readers discover new books and authors, and bring readers in contact with each other and with writers. Read more ».
There are no reviews for this book yet.