Today when most Americans think of the Great Depression, they
imagine desperate hoboes riding the rails in search of work,
unemployed men selling pencils to indifferent crowds, bootleggers
hustling illegal booze to secrecy-shrouded speakeasies, FDR
smiling, or Judy Garland skipping along the yellow brick road. Hard
times have become an abstraction. But there was a time when
economic suffering was real, when hunger stalked the land, and
Americans tried to forget their troubles in movie theaters or in
front of a radio.
From the stock market crash of October 1929 to Germany's
invasion of Norway, France, and the Low Countries in 1940, the
Great Depression blanketed the world economy. Its impact was
particularly deep and direct in the United States. This was the era
when the federal government became a major player in the national
economy and Americans bestowed the responsibility for maintaining
full employment and stable prices on Congress and the White House,
making the Depression years a major watershed in U.S. history. In
more than 500 essays, this book provides a ready reference to those
hard times, covering the diplomacy, popular culture, intellectual
life, economic problems, public policy issues, and prominent
individuals of the era.
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