Mothers of the South; portraiture of the white tenant farm woman
1 hr read
Rate this book:
About This Book
A generation of social scientists was raised on the work of Margaret Jarman Hagood, a leading sociologist of the Depression South. In 1937 Hagood visited 254 tenant houses in the Carolina Piedmont, Georgia, and Alabama, talking with and listening to southern mothers. Mothers of the South records not only the results of her work but the voices, attitudes, and expectations of the people she interviewed. Tenant farming, a widespread way of life in the thirties, began to disappear with the coming of World War II and increased farm mechanization and became virtually nonexistent by the 1970s. Hagood's work is invaluable for its insight into this lost world. It serves as a window into the life experiences, agricultural practices, social organization, and values of tenant families.
Buy This Book
As an Amazon Associate and Bookshop.org affiliate, BookOrb earns from qualifying purchases.
Write a Review
Sign in to write a review.
More by Margaret Jarman Hagood
Farm operator family level of living indexes for counties of the United States, 1940 and 1945
Farm population and utilization of resources in the post-war period
Farm-operator family level-of-living indexes for counties of the United States, 1930, 1940, 1945, and 1950
Projections of the regional di
Projections of the regional distribution of the population of the United States to 1975
Rural level of living indexes for counties of the United States, 1940
Rural-urban migration in Wisco
Rural-urban migration in Wisconsin, 1940-1950