What I am Reading

April 17, 2009

Deindustrialization Lit

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , , , — sllinkon @ 8:18 pm

Phillip Mayer’s new book, American Rust, shows us the lives of two young men who grew up in a small southwestern Pennsylvania town after the steel mills closed.  It’s a pretty good book, with some perspectives on how deindustrialization has affected people.  But I also think that Mayer’s novel is part of an emerging genre of fiction that focuses on life after shutdowns.  Tawni O’Dell has written three similar books, including Back Roads and Sister Mine, set in a Pennsylvania coal town.  O’Dell and Mayer both focus on not only on how people survive and struggle in communities without work but also on how family dysfunctions get passed on from one generation to the next.  That makes these novels difficult in some ways, but powerful, and it’s clear in the work of both writers that family problems are deeply rooted in economic struggle.

Schools, bullies and homophobia

Filed under: Uncategorized — pjkobulnicky @ 3:42 pm

Judith Warner has an excellent piece in the (online) New York Times about the grave outcomes of a resurgence of bullying in schools that focuses on singling out those who are different in any way with accusations of “gay”
or “fag”. It has ever been thus, even while we strongly believe that we live in more tolerant times. Ms. Warner also points out that girls work very hard today to push the limits of sexual preening as far as possible without crossing the border that might lable them “slut”.

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