Ouça e leia

Entre em um mundo infinito de histórias

  • Ler e ouvir tanto quanto você quiser
  • Com mais de 500.000 títulos
  • Títulos exclusivos + Storytel Originals
  • 7 dias de teste gratuito, depois R$19,90/mês
  • Fácil de cancelar a qualquer momento
Assine agora
br bdp devices

Mother Chicago: Truant Dreams and Specters Over the Gilded Age

Idiomas
Inglês
Format
Categoria

História

Chicago lauded as hog-butcher by poet Sandburg, then damned as a cannibal in Sinclair's The Jungle, was also a city of wanderers, truants, and delinquents. It was home to the largest tuberculosis sanitarium in the country, as well as a dizzying number of public and private institutions for wayward children, indigents, the mad, and the poor. Chicago's socially progressive institutions were influential and respected as saviors of the immigrants and "lower classes." Yet, the savage race riots of 1919 laid bare the eugenic truth of an ongoing, second Civil War operating as the Northern status quo.

Mother Chicago is the story of three of these institutions – an obscure juvenile experiment called the Chicago Parental School, the great Municipal Sanitarium, and the amalgam of poor house, asylum, and cemetery that occupied the far northern boundaries of the City. This sector of quarantine and detention built on stolen lands acted as a limiter on the production of dreams and an orphan zone for people cast adrift by societal decree. Outside its walls, City power worked in ways both mysterious and transparent while the land harbored peculiar hallucinations that still must be banished.

As the City grew larger, these institutions became fissures in the streets and the transport lines, odd reminders of the Gilded Age, which had made them. Mother Chicago tells the story of the corporeal specters used against the working class: real estate, redlining, property speculation, racism, and collateralized debt. Like the game of snakes and ladders, the City lays her traps for the unlucky and benighted on a numbered grid.

Billheimer turns a life-long obsession with the ephemera of Chicago history to tell the City's story through the relics of her forgotten places.

© 2021 Feral House (Ebook): 9781627311175

Data de lançamento

Ebook: 17 de maio de 2021

Outros também usufruíram...

  1. Debating War and Peace: Media Coverage of U.S. Intervention in the Post-Vietnam Era Jonathan Mermin
  2. Secrets & Saviours Beverley Elphick
  3. Write like a Man: Jewish Masculinity and the New York Intellectuals Ronnie Grinberg
  4. Walker Evans: Starting from Scratch Svetlana Alpers
  5. The Struggle for the People’s King: How Politics Transforms the Memory of the Civil Rights Movement Hajar Yazdiha
  6. Scouting and Scoring: How We Know What We Know about Baseball Christopher J. Phillips
  7. Of Human Born: Fetal Lives, 1800–1950 Caroline Arni
  8. Quest for Inclusion: Jews and Liberalism in Modern America Marc Dollinger
  9. Pasión Miguel Lourenco Pereira
  10. St Giles-in-the-Fields Rebecca Preston
  11. The Autobiography of a Seventeenth-Century Venetian Rabbi: Leon Modena's Life of Judah Mark R. Cohen
  12. From the Darkness Cometh the Light: Or, Struggles for Freedom Lucy A. Delaney
  13. Lower East Side Memories: A Jewish Place in America Hasia R. Diner
  14. Ancient Africa: A Global History, to 300 CE Christopher Ehret
  15. The Clue of the Twisted Candle Edgar Wallace
  16. Defending America: Military Culture and the Cold War Court-Martial Elizabeth Lutes Hillman
  17. Siting Michelangelo : Spectatorship, Site Specificity and Soundscape Peter Gillgren
  18. Table with a View: The History and Recipes of Nick's Cove Dena Grunt
  19. Retribution Beverley Elphick
  20. The Flood Year 1927: A Cultural History Susan Scott Parrish
  21. Baseball in Blue and Gray: The National Pastime during the Civil War George B. Kirsch
  22. Northern Protestants: On Shifting Ground Susan McKay
  23. Title IX, Pat Summitt, and Tennessee's Trailblazers: 50 Years, 50 Stories Mary Ellen Pethel
  24. 100 Years of Grand Ole Opry: A Celebration of the Artists, the Fans, and the Home of Country Music Grand Ole Opry
  25. Defend the Sacred: Native American Religious Freedom beyond the First Amendment Michael D. McNally
  26. The Indignant Generation: A Narrative History of African American Writers and Critics, 1934-1960 Lawrence P. Jackson
  27. Laws of the Land: Fengshui and the State in Qing Dynasty China Tristan G. Brown
  28. Eça de Queiroz: Sparks Brazilian Unrest Paulo Cavalcanti
  29. Slaves Tell Tales: And Other Episodes in the Politics of Popular Culture in Ancient Greece Sara Forsdyke
  30. FSU’s Sons of the Sixties: A Case for the Defense John Crowe