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The emergence into pop culture of quaint and simple Ozarks
Mountaineers-through the writings of Vance Randolph, Wayman Hogue,
Charles Morrow Wilson, and others-was a comfort and fascination to
many Americans in the early twentieth century. Disillusioned with
the modernity they felt had contributed to the Great Depression,
middle-class Americans admired the Ozarkers' apparently simple way
of life, which they saw as an alternative to an increasingly urban
and industrial America. Catherine S. Barker's 1941 book Yesterday
Today: Life in the Ozarks sought to illuminate another side of
these "remnants of eighteenth-century life and culture": poverty
and despair. Drawing on her encounters and experiences as a federal
social worker in the backwoods of the Ozarks in the 1930s, Barker
described the mountaineers as "lovable and pathetic and needy and
self-satisfied and valiant," declaring that the virtuous and
independent people of the hills deserved a better way and a more
abundant life. Barker was also convinced that there were just as
many contemptible facets of life in the Ozarks that needed to be
replaced as there were virtues that needed to be preserved. This
reprinting of Yesterday Today-edited and introduced by historian J.
Blake Perkins-situates this account among the Great Depression-era
chronicles of the Ozarks.
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