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You Will Never Be One of Us - A Teacher, a Texas Town, and the Rural Roots of Radical Conservatism (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R988
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You Will Never Be One of Us - A Teacher, a Texas Town, and the Rural Roots of Radical Conservatism (Hardcover)
Series: New Directions in Tejano History
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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During the spring semester of 1975, Wayne Woodward, a popular young
English teacher at La Plata Junior High School in Hereford, Texas,
was unceremoniously fired. His offense? Founding a local chapter of
the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU). Believing he had been
unjustly targeted, Woodward sued the school district. You Will
Never Be One of Us chronicles the circumstances surrounding
Woodward's dismissal and the ensuing legal battle. Revealing a
uniquely regional aspect of the cultural upheaval of the 1970s, the
case offers rare insight into the beginnings of the rural-urban,
local-national divide that continues to roil American politics. By
1975 Hereford, a quiet farming town in the Texas Panhandle, had
become "majority minority," and Woodward's students were mostly the
children of Mexican and Mexican American workers at local
agribusinesses. Most townspeople viewed the ACLU as they did
Woodward's long hair and politics: as threatening a radical liberal
takeover-and a reckoning for the town's white power structure.
Locals were presented with a choice: either support school
officials who sought to rid themselves of a liberal troublemaker,
or side with an idealistic young man whose constitutional rights
might have been violated. In Timothy Bowman's deft telling,
Woodward's story exposes the sources and depths of rural America's
political culture during the latter half of the twentieth century
and the lengths to which small-town conservatives would go to
defend it. In defining a distinctive rural, middle-American
"Panhandle conservatism," You Will Never Be One of Us extends the
study of the conservative movement beyond the suburbs of the
Sunbelt and expands our understanding of a continuing, perhaps
deepening, rift in American political culture.
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