Regional Renewal
The American Midwest and the Idea of Regionalism
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Produktinformation
- Utgivningsdatum:2027-01-05
- Mått:152 x 229 x undefined mm
- Format:Häftad
- Språk:Engelska
- Serie:Heartland History
- Antal sidor:472
- Förlag:Indiana University Press
- ISBN:9780253077233
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Michael C. Steiner is professor emeritus of American Studies at California State University, Fullerton where he taught for forty years, from 1975 until 2015. During his years at Fullerton, Steiner served as department chair and twice as a Distinguished Fulbright Chair: in Hungary in 1998–1999, and in Poland in 2004. He is the author of more than thirty peer-reviewed articles, among them the prize-winning essays "The Significance of Turner's Sectional Thesis" and "Frontierland as Tomorrowland: Walt Disney's Architectural Packaging of the Mythic West." Steiner is also the author or editor of five books, most recently: with Wayne Franklin, Mapping American Culture; with David Wrobel, Many Wests: Place, Culture, and Regional Identity; Regionalists on the Left: Radical Voices from the American West; and Horace M. Kallen in the Heartland: The Midwestern Roots of American Pluralism. A native Midwesterner, Steiner currently lives in Easton, Pennsylvania and focuses his creative energy on writing and lecturing about American regionalism and the Midwest.
Innehållsförteckning
- AcknowledgmentsPrologue: The Midwest as Seedbed of Diversity and Source of IdeasPart One: An Emerging Region and a Variety of Voices1. Section, Region, Nation, World2. Native, White, and Black Heartlands: The Midwest as a Wellspring of Diversity3. Varieties of Regional Thought and the Midwest as Seedbed of an IdeaPart Two: Four Founders of Regional Theory4. John Wesley Powell and the Physical Foundation of Regionalism5. Jane Addams, the Urban Frontier, and the Cosmopolitan Neighborhood6. Frederick Jackson Turner and the Significance of Sections7. Hamlin Garland, the Middle Border, and the Rise and Fall of a Radical RegionalistPart Three: Race and Regionalism8. The Rise of the Black Chicago Renaissance, and the Expansion of American Regionalism, 1927–19459. The Persistence of Midwestern Regionalism, 1940s and BeyondEpilogue: Regionalism Is a Forever AgendaNotesIndex