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Boxcar Politics
A01=John Lennon
alternative citizenship expressions
alternative political spaces
American mobility studies
anti-establishment travelers
anti-hierarchical activism
Author_John Lennon
Category=DSBF
Category=DSBH
Category=JBFD
class outsider identities
class struggle mobility
counter-institutional politics
countercultural travel narratives
cultural memory of wanderers
cultural resistance on rails
cultural vagrancy studies
Depression-era survival networks
economic displacement history
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
freight corridor folklore
freight line autonomy
freight train folklore
grassroots nomadic activism
Great Depression mobility
hobo language and slang
hobo literature analysis
industrial age wanderers
industrial mobility pathways
itinerant labor narratives
itinerant subculture practices
marginalized political voices
mobile worker solidarity
mobility as class resistance
mobility as protest
nomadic worker representation
nonconformist mobility
occupational nomadism
outlaw Americana imagery
outlaw labor identity
poetic train riders
political outsider traditions
radical travel insurgency
radical wanderer archetype
rail yard social life
railroad subculture history
roadside America culture
subaltern mobility theory
subversive travel narratives
subversive travel practices
train-hopping subculture
tramp memoir scholarship
transcontinental railroad culture
transient community formation
transient worker politics
traveling protest strategies
vagrant cultural mythology
wandering labor heritage
working class dissent traditions
Product details
- ISBN 9781625341204
- Weight: 369g
- Dimensions: 152 x 235mm
- Publication Date: 14 Oct 2014
- Publisher: University of Massachusetts Press
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Paperback
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The hobo is a figure ensconced in the cultural fabric of the United States. Once categorized as a member of a homeless army who ought to be jailed or killed, the hobo has evolved into a safe, grandfatherly exemplar of Americana. Boxcar Politics reestablishes the hobo’s political thorns.
John Lennon maps the rise and demise of the political hobo from the nineteenth-century introduction of the transcontinental railroad to the Federal Aid Highway Act of 1956. Intertwining literary, historical, and theoretical representations of the hobo, he explores how riders and writers imagined alternative ways that working-class people could use mobility to create powerful dissenting voices outside of fixed hierarchal political organizations. Placing portrayals of hobos in the works of Jack London, Jim Tully, John Dos Passos, and Jack Kerouac alongside the lived reality of people hopping trains (including hobos of the IWW, the Scottsboro Boys, and those found in numerous long-forgotten memoirs), Lennon investigates how these marginalized individuals exerted collective political voices through subcultural practices.
John Lennon maps the rise and demise of the political hobo from the nineteenth-century introduction of the transcontinental railroad to the Federal Aid Highway Act of 1956. Intertwining literary, historical, and theoretical representations of the hobo, he explores how riders and writers imagined alternative ways that working-class people could use mobility to create powerful dissenting voices outside of fixed hierarchal political organizations. Placing portrayals of hobos in the works of Jack London, Jim Tully, John Dos Passos, and Jack Kerouac alongside the lived reality of people hopping trains (including hobos of the IWW, the Scottsboro Boys, and those found in numerous long-forgotten memoirs), Lennon investigates how these marginalized individuals exerted collective political voices through subcultural practices.
John Lennon is assistant professor of English at the University of South Florida.
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