"Born in the Country" was the first--and is still the
only--general history of rural America published. Ranging from
pre-Columbian times to the enormous changes of the twentieth
century, "Born in the Country" masterfully integrates agricultural,
technological, and economic themes with new questions social
historians have raised about the American experience--including the
different experiences of whites and blacks, men and women, natives
and new immigrants.
In this second edition, David B. Danbom expands and deepens his
coverage of the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries,
focusing on the changes in agriculture and rural life since 1945.
He discusses the alarming decline of agriculture as a productive
enterprise and the parallel disintegration of farm families into
demographic insignificance. In a new and provocative afterword,
Danbom reflects on whether a distinctive style of rural life exists
any longer.
Combining mastery of existing scholarship with a fresh approach
to new material, "Born in the Country" continues to define the
field of American rural history.
General
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