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The Uncertainty of Everyday Life, 19151945
Harvey Green
The era between the world wars, from the "roaring 20s" to the
grim days of the Great Depression, was a time of tremendous change.
The United States became an increasingly urban culture as people
left their farms to seek work in the cities. Many blacks moved
North to escape the violence and racism of a resurgent Ku Klux
Klan in the South. And, while life became more comfortable for
many Americans during this period, by 1941 only half the population
enjoyed the modern conveniences we now take for granted.
With improvements in technology and the rise of consumerism (spurred
by the new "science" of advertising) the country was expanding
in every direction. However, for many Americans, daily life was
fraught with uncertainty. Jobs and wages were unpredictable, labor
unrest was constant, and savings vanished in the stock market.
In this vividly detailed narrative, Harvey Green recounts an era
of unprecedented change in American culture and examines the impact
of these uncertain times on such aspects of daily life as employment,
home life, gender roles, education, religion, and recreation.
"The author . . . has filled his exceptionally readable work
with minutiae of everyday life, from frozen foods to Superman comics,
using these material things to illuminate broader aspects of American
culture."
Deborah Hammer
The Library Journal
2000
5.5"x8.5"
296 pages
$16.00 paper (s)
978-1-55728-598-0 | 1-55728-598-5
Harvey Green is a professor of history at Northeastern
University. His earlier works include The Light of the Home: An Intimate
View of Women in Victorian America (1984, Pantheon) and Fit for
America: Health, Fitness, Sport, and American Society 18301940
(1988, Johns Hopkins University Press).
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