A revealing examination of small-town life More than thirty million Americans live in small, out-of-the-way places. Many of them could have joined the vast majority of Americans who live in cities and suburbs. They could live closer to more lucrative careers and convenient shopping, a wider range of educational opportunities, and more robust health care. But they have opted to live differently. In Small-Town America, we meet factory workers, shop owners, retirees, teachers, clergy, and mayors—residents who show neighborliness in small ways, but who also worry about everything from school closings and their children's futures to the ups and downs of the local economy. Drawing on more than seven hundred in-depth interviews in hundreds of towns across America and three decades of census data, Robert Wuthnow shows the fragility of community in small towns. He covers a host of topics, including the symbols and rituals of small-town life, the roles of formal and informal leaders, the social role of religious congregations, the perception of moral and economic decline, and the myriad ways residents in small towns make sense of their own lives. Wuthnow also tackles difficult issues such as class and race, abortion, homosexuality, and substance abuse. Small-Town America paints a rich panorama of individuals who reside in small communities, finding that, for many people, living in a small town is an important part of self-identity.
The photographs of David Plowden, David McCullough once said, "confer a kind of immortality on certain aspects of American civilization before they vanish". In this, his nineteenth book on the...
"The history of America is the history of its small towns. For better or worse, small town values, convictions, and attitudes have shaped the psyche of this nation...[This book] chronicles...
... 78m, 102n, 12.5m, 126 Henderson, John P., 265m Henshaw, Stanley K., 225m Hession, John C., 112m, 288m Hewitt, Julie, ... Olson, Lawrence, 136n P Perkinson, Leon, 122n Petrulis, M. F., 277n Pfeffer, Max, 48n, 263 Picard, Paul R., ...
In Habits of the Heartland, Lyn C. Macgregor investigates how the residents of Viroqua, Wisconsin, population 4,355, create a small-town community together. Macgregor lived in Viroqua for nearly two years.
Small-town America in Film: The Decline and Fall of Community
William H. Whyte writes shrewdly about the development of community in Park Forest in his 1956 best seller and classic, The Organization Man (1956; Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2002), 283. 2.
In a thoroughly engaging style John Miller introduces us to the small-town Midwestern boys who dreamed the America we know today and who made it real; from Frederick Jackson Turner and George Washington Carver to Henry Ford and Sam Walton.
Richard O. Davies takes the reader through two hundred years of American history as reflected in the small Ohio farming village of Camden. Davies describes the development of the relatively...
This double vision puts Queen less in line with Tarkington and more in the camp of the 1920s Regionalists. As Robert Dorman observes in his study Revolt of the Provinces, pioneers represented for the Regionalists both a lost way of life ...
Moving beyond simplistic depictions of America’s heartland, The Left Behind offers a clearer picture of how this important population will influence the nation’s political future.