Shantytown Sketches

Shantytown Sketches
Title Shantytown Sketches PDF eBook
Author Anthony Joseph Drexel Biddle
Publisher
Pages 88
Release 1897
Genre American wit and humor
ISBN

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Shantytown, USA

Shantytown, USA
Title Shantytown, USA PDF eBook
Author Lisa Goff
Publisher Harvard University Press
Pages 320
Release 2016-04-25
Genre History
ISBN 0674968980

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The word “shantytown” conjures images of crowded slums in developing nations. Though their history is largely forgotten, shantytowns were a prominent feature of one developing nation in particular: the United States. Lisa Goff restores shantytowns to the central place they once occupied in America’s urban landscape, showing how the basic but resourcefully constructed dwellings of America’s working poor were not merely the byproducts of economic hardship but potent assertions of self-reliance. In the nineteenth century, poor workers built shantytowns across America’s frontiers and its booming industrial cities. Settlements covered large swaths of urban property, including a twenty-block stretch of Manhattan, much of Brooklyn’s waterfront, and present-day Dupont Circle in Washington, D.C. Names like Tinkersville and Hayti evoked the occupations and ethnicities of shantytown residents, who were most often European immigrants and African Americans. These inhabitants defended their civil rights and went to court to protect their property and resist eviction, claiming the benefits of middle-class citizenship without its bourgeois trappings. Over time, middle-class contempt for shantytowns increased. When veterans erected an encampment near the U.S. Capitol in the 1930s President Hoover ordered the army to destroy it, thus inspiring the Depression-era slang “Hoovervilles.” Twentieth-century reforms in urban zoning and public housing, introduced as progressive efforts to provide better dwellings, curtailed the growth of shantytowns. Yet their legacy is still felt in sites of political activism, from shanties on college campuses protesting South African apartheid to the tent cities of Occupy Wall Street demonstrations.

The Outlook

The Outlook
Title The Outlook PDF eBook
Author Lyman Abbott
Publisher
Pages 1092
Release 1898
Genre United States
ISBN

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The Annual American Catalogue 1886-1900

The Annual American Catalogue 1886-1900
Title The Annual American Catalogue 1886-1900 PDF eBook
Author
Publisher
Pages 414
Release 1899
Genre American literature
ISBN

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The Dial

The Dial
Title The Dial PDF eBook
Author Francis Fisher Browne
Publisher
Pages 932
Release 1898
Genre American literature
ISBN

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The English Catalogue of Books [annual]

The English Catalogue of Books [annual]
Title The English Catalogue of Books [annual] PDF eBook
Author
Publisher
Pages 266
Release 1899
Genre English literature
ISBN

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Vols. for 1898-1968 include a directory of publishers.

The Irish Voice in America

The Irish Voice in America
Title The Irish Voice in America PDF eBook
Author Charles Fanning
Publisher University Press of Kentucky
Pages 700
Release 2021-10-21
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 0813184061

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In this study, Charles Fanning has written the first general account of the origins and development of a literary tradition among American writers of Irish birth or background who have explored the Irish immigrant or ethnic experience in works of fiction. The result is a portrait of the evolving fictional self-consciousness of an immigrant group over a span of 250 years. Fanning traces the roots of Irish-American writing back to the eighteenth century and carries it forward through the traumatic years of the Famine to the present time with an intensely productive period in the twentieth century beginning with James T. Farrell. Later writers treated in depth include Edwin O'Connor, Elizabeth Cullinan, Maureen Howard, and William Kennedy. Along the way he places in the historical record many all but forgotten writers, including the prolific Mary Ann Sadlier. The Irish Voice in America is not only a highly readable contribution to American literary history but also a valuable reference to many writers and their works. For this second edition, Fanning has added a chapter that covers the fiction of the past decade. He argues that contemporary writers continue to draw on Ireland as a source and are important chroniclers of the modern American experience.