An Appalachian reawakening : West Virginia and the perils of the new machine age, 1945-1972 /
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Morgantown :
West Virginia University Press,
2010.
|
Edición: | 1st ed. |
Colección: | West Virginia and Appalachia ;
12. |
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Front Cover
- West Virginia and Appalachia Series Page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- A New Machine Age in the Hills
- Appalachian Contradiction
- A Revolution in Coal
- The UMWA Embraces the Revolution
- The Fade of the Mountain Farm
- A General Economic Decline
- West Virginians and the Mass Culture of the Age
- The Great Migration: Leaving “Those Hills, the Place I Call Home�
- Conclusion
- American Paradox, Appalachian Stereotype
- The Alienation of the Land
- Horse-and-Buggy Vestiges
- The Patteson EraMcCarthyism: The Second Red Scare
- “Like a Bolt of Lightning�: Marland�s Severance Tax Proposal
- Hard Times and the Search for Panaceas
- Marland: Flawed Champion of Change
- The Emergence of Cecil Underwood
- The Challenges of Education in the Age of Sputnik
- A Changing of the Guard
- A Deteriorating Economy and Agonizing Reappraisals
- “An American Paradox�: Imperfections in the Glare of National Attention
- Planning for Regional Action
- Affection in Adversity
- Conclusion
- Civil Rights in the New Machine Age
- African Americans in West Virginia: Balancing Two Segregationist PartiesJim Crow and the Impact of the Revolution in Coal
- Desegregating the Schools: The Impact of Brown
- A Rehearsal for Desegregation
- Persistent Segregation
- Integrating Higher Education
- Integrating the Broader Society: A Grassroots Awakening
- Churches and Civil Rights
- Conclusion
- Good Intentions: The New Frontier and the War on Poverty
- Structural Unemployment, Automation, and the Culture of Poverty
- The View from Megalopolis
- A “Robber Barron� of the New Frontier
- The Centennial: Accentuating the PositiveLBJ and the War on Poverty
- Hulett C. Smith�s Sin of Omission
- Challenges of “Creative Federalism�
- Disappointments of the Crash Program
- From Head Start to VISTA
- Charleston as Prototype: Community Action and “Maximum Feasible Participation�
- Hardy and McDowell: Appalachian Models for the War on Poverty
- Reaction in West Virginia
- Guns Over Butter: OEO in Retreat
- Reorganizing the State OEO
- “Rethinking OEO�s Approach�: Assessing McDowell and Kanawha
- The ARC: A Lost Opportunity?
- ConclusionRaising Hell in the Hillsand Hollows: AVs, VISTAs, and Community Action
- Huey Perry and the Mingo Model for “Maximum Feasible Participation�
- The Rise of the Appalachian Volunteers
- AVs in West Virginia: “Outsiders and Trouble Makers� or “the Best Hope for Change�?
- Rising Militancy in Appalachia
- AVs Under Attack
- Governor Smith Closes Ranks with the Critics
- Assessing AVs and VISTAs
- West Virginia�s War on Poverty in Retrospect
- From the Silver Bridge to Farmington and Rumblings at the Grassroots