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On the Irish Waterfront - The Crusader, the Movie, and the Soul of the Port of New York (Paperback)
Loot Price: R365
Discovery Miles 3 650
You Save: R78
(18%)
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On the Irish Waterfront - The Crusader, the Movie, and the Soul of the Port of New York (Paperback)
Series: Cushwa Center Studies of Catholicism in Twentieth-Century America
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List price R443
Loot Price R365
Discovery Miles 3 650
You Save R78 (18%)
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Site of the world's busiest and most lucrative harbor throughout
the first half of the twentieth century, the Port of New York was
also the historic preserve of Irish American gangsters,
politicians, longshoremen's union leaders, and powerful Roman
Catholic pastors. This is the demimonde depicted to stunning effect
in Elia Kazan's On the Waterfront (1954) and into which James T.
Fisher takes readers in this remarkable and engaging historical
account of the classic film's backstory. Fisher introduces readers
to the real "Father Pete Barry" featured in On the Waterfront, John
M. "Pete" Corridan, a crusading priest committed to winning union
democracy and social justice for the port's dockworkers and their
families. A Jesuit labor school instructor, not a parish priest,
Corridan was on but not of Manhattan's West Side Irish waterfront.
His ferocious advocacy was resisted by the very men he sought to
rescue from the violence and criminality that rendered the port "a
jungle, an outlaw frontier," in the words of investigative reporter
Malcolm Johnson. Driven off the waterfront, Corridan forged
creative and spiritual alliances with men like Johnson and Budd
Schulberg, the screenwriter who worked with Corridan for five years
to turn Johnson's Pulitzer Prize-winning 1948 newspaper expose into
a movie. Fisher's detailed account of the waterfront priest's
central role in the film's creation challenges standard views of
the film as a post facto justification for Kazan and Schulberg's
testimony as ex-communists before the House Committee on
Un-American Activities. On the Irish Waterfront is also a detailed
social history of the New York/New Jersey waterfront, from the rise
of Irish American entrepreneurs and political bosses during the
World War I era to the mid-1950s, when the emergence of a
revolutionary new mode of cargo-shipping signaled a radical
reorganization of the port. This book explores the conflicts
experienced and accommodations made by an insular Irish-Catholic
community forced to adapt its economic, political, and religious
lives to powerful forces of change both local and global in scope.
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