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At the height of the Cold War, dozens of radical and progressive
writers, illustrators, editors, librarians, booksellers, and
teachers cooperated to create and disseminate children's books that
challenged the status quo. Learning from the Left provides the
first historic overview of their work. Spanning from the 1920s,
when both children's book publishing and American Communism were
becoming significant on the American scene, to the late 1960s, when
youth who had been raised on many of the books in this study
unequivocally rejected the values of the Cold War, Learning from
the Left shows how "radical" values and ideas that have now become
mainstream (including cooperation, interracial friendship, critical
thinking, the dignity of labor, feminism, and the history of
marginalized people), were communicated to children in repressive
times. A range of popular and critically acclaimed children's
books, many by former teachers and others who had been blacklisted
because of their political beliefs, made commonplace the ideas that
McCarthyism tended to call "subversive." These books, about
history, science, and contemporary social conditions-as well as
imaginative works, science fiction, and popular girls' mystery
series-were readily available to children: most could be found in
public and school libraries, and some could even be purchased in
classrooms through book clubs that catered to educational
audiences. Drawing upon extensive interviews, archival research,
and hundreds of children's books published from the 1920s through
the 1970s, Learning from the Left offers a history of the
children's book in light of the history of the history of the Left,
and a new perspective on the links betweenthe Old Left of the 1930s
and the New Left of the 1960s.
Winner of the Grace Abbott Book Prize of the Society for the
History of Children and Youth
At the height of the Cold War, dozens of radical and progressive
writers, illustrators, editors, librarians, booksellers, and
teachers cooperated to create and disseminate children's books that
challenged the status quo. Learning from the Left provides the
first historic overview of their work. Spanning from the 1920s,
when both children's book publishing and American Communism were
becoming significant on the American scene, to the late 1960s, when
youth who had been raised on many of the books in this study
unequivocally rejected the values of the Cold War, Learning from
the Left shows how "radical" values and ideas that have now become
mainstream (including cooperation, interracial friendship, critical
thinking, the dignity of labor, feminism, and the history of
marginalized people), were communicated to children in repressive
times. A range of popular and critically acclaimed children's
books, many by former teachers and others who had been blacklisted
because of their political beliefs, made commonplace the ideas that
McCarthyism tended to call "subversive." These books, about
history, science, and contemporary social conditions-as well as
imaginative works, science fiction, and popular girls' mystery
series-were readily available to children: most could be found in
public and school libraries, and some could even be purchased in
classrooms through book clubs that catered to educational
audiences. Drawing upon extensive interviews, archival research,
and hundreds of children's books published from the 1920s through
the 1970s, Learning from the Left offers a history of the
children's book in light of the history of the history of the Left,
and a new perspective on the links betweenthe Old Left of the 1930s
and the New Left of the 1960s.
Winner of the Grace Abbott Book Prize of the Society for the
History of Children and Youth
If you were an independent, adventurous, liberated American woman
in the 1920s or '30s where might you have sought escape from the
constraints and compromises of bourgeois living? Paris and the Left
Bank quickly come to mind. But would you have ever thought of
Russia and the wilds of Siberia? This choice was not as unusual as
it seems now. As Julia Mickenberg uncovers in American Girls in Red
Russia, there is a forgotten counterpoint to the story of the Lost
Generation: beginning in the late nineteenth century, Russian
revolutionary ideology attracted many women, including suffragists,
reformers, educators, journalists, and artists, as well as curious
travelers. Some were famous, like Isadora Duncan or Lillian
Hellman; some were committed radicals, though many more were
curious about the "Soviet experiment." But all came to Russia in
search of social arrangements that would be more equitable, just,
and satisfying. And most in the end were disillusioned, sometimes
by the mundane realities, others by ugly truths too horrifying to
even contemplate. Mickenberg reveals the complex motives that drew
American women to Russia, which appeared to be the very embodiment
of modern ideas and ways of living. American women saw in Russia
the hope for a new era in which women would be not merely
independent of men, but also equal builders of a new society.
Russian women, after all, earned the right to vote in 1917, and
they also had abortion rights, property rights, the right to
divorce, maternity benefits, and state-supported childcare. Yet as
Mickenberg's sympathetic biography shows, Russia turned out to be
as much a grim commune as a utopia of freedom, replete with many of
the same economic and sexual inequities that the immigrants had
hoped to escape.American Girls in Red Russia recounts the
experiences of women who saved starving children from the Russian
famine, worked on rural communes in Siberia, wrote for Moscow or
New York newspapers, or performed on Soviet stages. Mickenberg
finally tells these forgotten stories, full of hope and grave
disappointments.
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