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Modern Housing for America

Policy Struggles in the New Deal Era

Gail Radford

$65.95

Paperback

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English
University of Chicago Press
01 January 1997
In an era when many decry the failures of federal housing programs, this book introduces us to appealing but largely forgotten alternatives that existed when federal policies were first defined in the New Deal. Led by Catherine Bauer, supporters of the modern housing initiative argued that government should emphasize non-commercial development of imaginatively designed compact neighborhoods with extensive parks and social services. The book explores the question of how Americans might have responded to this option through case studies of experimental developments in Philadelphia and New York. While defeated during the 1930s, modern housing ideas suggest a variety of design and financial strategies that could contribute to solving the housing problems of our own time.

By:  
Imprint:   University of Chicago Press
Country of Publication:   United States
Volume:   1996
Dimensions:   Height: 23mm,  Width: 15mm,  Spine: 2mm
Weight:   425g
ISBN:   9780226702230
ISBN 10:   0226702235
Series:   Historical Studies of Urban America
Pages:   284
Publication Date:  
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational ,  A / AS level ,  Further / Higher Education
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Gail Radford is associate professor of history at the University at Buffalo.

Reviews for Modern Housing for America: Policy Struggles in the New Deal Era

Praise for Knockemstiff : <br> More engaging than any new fiction in years... Knockemstiff gives us the impossible-fast, funny stories about the saddest people you'll ever meet in fiction. <br>-Chuck Palahniuk <br> Pollock's voice is fresh and full-throated...His steely, serrated prose...calls to mind Harry Crews. <br>- The New York Times Book Review<br> <br> Knockemstiff is a powerful, remarkable, exceptional book...Pollock knows these people, what they want and think and fee, and he takes us there without flinching. <br>- Los Angeles Times <br> These are absorbing stories that linger and haunt. They crept up on me, leaving me breathless and shaken. <br>- The Oregonian <br> <br> [Donald Ray Pollock] could be the next important voice in American fiction. <br>- Wall Street Journal <br> <br> Startling, bleak, uncompromising and funny...This is as raw as American fiction gets. It is an unforgettable experience. <br>- San Francisco Chronicle <br> Profanely comic...Pollock's tales are spiked with a lurid panache that handily earns its own literary genre: Southern Ohio Gothic. <br> - Elle<br> <br> Pollock doesn't so much push the envelope as incinerate it, but his potent narrative gifts (and pitch-black humor) make it impossible to look away from the flames. <br>- The Washington Post (web) <br> Here is a collection of stories that are perhaps unique in our time...Wry and raw and poignant, these extraordinary stories are gritty with the yeast of folks caught in the act of being only too human. <br>-Larry Heinemann, author of Paco's Story<br> <br> A debut collection of terrifying, darkly funny stories concerning the drug-addled, beaten-down inhabitants of a southern Ohioholler called Knockemstiff. <br>Pollock's characters are in dire straits: They tend to be addicts, brutes, connivers and small-time criminals with big-time depravities. A boy gets caught having sex with his sister's doll in Hair's Fate. Pills depicts tweakers on a binge. In Giganthomachy, a woman draws tattoos on her son's arm, hands him a pair of scissors and asks him to come into her bedroom pretending to be mass-murderer Richard Speck: Just spit on the floor, maybe, she says. Hurt me, but don't really hurt me. Another woman, in Rainy Sunday, helps her heavyset older aunt lure horny drunks into sex. Blessed shows a thief, disabled by falling off a roof mid-robbery, descending into a horrifically graphic addiction to painkillers. Several tales feature epicene young men hectored by violent fathers; others show people trying and failing again and again to escape, or even, finally, to want to escape. Throughout, Pollock shows deep empathy for these whipped and battered souls, most looking not so much for a way out as for a way to let it all slide. As one says, It's the same for most of us; forgetting our lives might be the best we'll ever do. The stories are strikingly similar in tone, setting, characters, even length, but that's scarcely a problem in a collection as bleakly, unsettlingly funny--and touching--as this one. <br>Pollock grabs by the throat and doesn't let go. -- Kirkus<br> <br> A native of Knockemstiff, Ohio, Pollock delivers poignant and raunchy accounts of his hometown's sad and stagnant residents in his debut story collection that may remind readers of its thematic grand-daddy, Winesburg, Ohio, . . The language and imagery of the novel are shockinglydirect in detailing the pitiful lives of drug abusers, perverts, and a forgotten population that just isn't much welcome nowhere in the world. Many of the characters appear in more than one story, providing a gritty depth to the whole, but the character that stands out the most is the town, as dismal and hopeless as the locals. Pollock is intimate with the grimy aspects of a small town (especially one named after a fistfight) full of poor, uneducated people without futures or knowledge of any other way to live. The most startling thing about these stories is that they have an aura of truth. <br>-- Publishers Weekly <br> This electrifying collection of linked stories uses the voices of the rural hamlet of Knockemstiff to create a coherent world of echoing themes and recurring characters that has the drive and impact of a fine novel. Pollock brings grace and precision to colloquial language, and the ferocious integrity of his vision is flat-out stunning. Pollock grapples with savagery and reveals primal tenderness. <br> After every story in Knockemstiff I had to take a walk and let my head cool down. I keep reaching for some other writer to compare him with--maybe a Raymond Carver with hope and vitality, or a godless Flannery O'Connor--but Pollock is no shadow of anybody else. This is a powerful talent at work. --Katherine Dunn, author of Geek Love


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