Everything Was Better in America

Regular price €103.99
Title
1936
A01=David Welky
American history
Author_David Welky
belief
best sellers
best selling books
book industry
cartoons
Category=GTC
Category=NHK
comic strips
communication
Communist Party
conservative
culture
culture during the Depression
definition of womanhood
domestic
Ellery Queen
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
era
gender
Gone With the Wind
Great Depression
kidnapping
Ladies' Home Journal
Lindbergh
magazines
mainstream
mainstream culture
mass culture
media and the New Deal
media bias
media culture
media interpretation
media study
middle-class
nation
newspaper
novels
Olympics
outsider
politics
portrait
press
press and the New Deal
print culture
publishing
race
radical
spokesman
Superman
The Good Earth
World War II

Product details

  • ISBN 9780252032998
  • Weight: 567g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 01 May 2008
  • Publisher: University of Illinois Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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As a counterpart to research on the 1930s that has focused on liberal and radical writers calling for social revolution, David Welky offers this eloquent study of how mainstream print culture shaped and disseminated a message affirming conservative middle-class values and assuring its readers that holding to these values would get them through hard times. Through analysis of the era's most popular newspaper stories, magazines, and books, Welky examines how voices both outside and within the media debated the purposes of literature and the meaning of cultural literacy in a mass democracy. He presents lively discussions of such topics as the newspaper treatment of the Lindbergh kidnapping, issues of race in coverage of the 1936 Olympic games, domestic dynamics and gender politics in cartoons and magazines, Superman's evolution from a radical outsider to a spokesman for the people, and the popular consumption of such novels as the Ellery Queen mysteries, Gone with the Wind, and The Good Earth. Through these close readings, Welky uncovers the subtle relationship between the messages that mainstream media strategically crafted and those that their target audience wished to hear.
David Welky is a professor of history at the University of Central Arkansas. His books include A Wretched and Precarious Situation: In Search of the Last Arctic Frontier.