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Review Symposium

Race, region, and the new deal: reflections on Ira Katznelson's Fear Itself

Pages 206-212 | Published online: 15 May 2015
 

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.

Notes

 1. For example, CitationLassiter and Crispino, Myth of Southern Exceptionalism.

 2.CitationQuadagno, Color of Welfare; CitationLieberman, Shifting the Color Line.

 3.CitationAlston and Ferrie, Southern Paternalism and the American Welfare State.

 4. A majority of “croppers” were black, but the numerical margin was small: 50.5% in 1930, 55.3% in 1940, 60.5% in 1945. Historical Statistics of the United States: Colonial Times to 1970 (Washington, DC, 1970), 465.

 5.CitationWright, Old South New South; see also CitationRosenbloom, Looking for Work, esp. chapters 2 and 5.

 6. See CitationCarlton and Coclanis, Confronting Southern Poverty, 25, 54, 139–43.

 7.CitationGilmore, Defying Dixie, 17.

 8. Similar points are raised in CitationLemann, “New Deal We Didn't Know.” An econometric analysis of southern unions is presented in CitationFriedman, “Political Economy of Early Southern Unionism.”

 9.CitationWright, Old South New South, 226–35; CitationWhatley, “Labor for the Picking”; CitationWhayne, A New Plantation South, 167, 175, 216.

10.CitationFleck, “Democratic Opposition.”

11.CitationNorrell, “Labor at the Ballot Box.”

12.CitationSchulman, From Cotton Belt to Sunbelt, 92–93. I argue that the expansion of wartime spending in the South was made possible by the prior impact of the New Deal on the region's infrastructure, environment, and public health and disease conditions.

13.CitationWright, Sharing the Prize.

14.CitationKatznelson, “Great and Grudging Transformation.”

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Gavin Wright

Gavin Wright is the William Robertson Coe Professor of American Economic History at Stanford University, where he has taught since 1982. Wright has a longstanding interest in the economic history of the American South, including his latest book Sharing the Prize: The Economics of the Civil Rights Revolution in the American South.

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