Prohibition in Kansas
A History
Robert Smith Bader
xiv, 322 pages, illustrated, 6 x 9
Paper ISBN 978-0-7006-0299-5, $16.95
More than fifty years after repeal
of the Volstead Act, this nation continues to debate the issues
surrounding the use and control of alcohol. While the organized
temperance movement in the United States is nearly as old as
the nation itself, in no region of the country has the question
of liquor control been of more consuming or enduring interest
than in Kansas. Until now, however, there has been no broadly
interpretive social history that chronicled prohibition in Kansas.
Robert Bader's comprehensive account presents an even-handed
analysis of the reform movement and of the role of women and
of religion in it. In 1880, Kansas became the first state to
write into its constitution a prohibition on alcohol, making
it one of the very few states with extensive experience with
prohibition as a public policy in both the pre- and post-Volstead
periods. Since the campaign preceding the 1880 election, through
the era of Carry Nation and national prohibition, up to the present
day, the issue has been under continuous, and usually heated,
public discussion.
With remarkable ability, Bader dispels many of the shibboleths
surrounding this reform movement, stressing both the accomplishments
and triumphs of the "drys" as well as their failures
and shortcomings. Based on sources never fully exploited before,
this book transcends the Kansas experience and demonstrates important
aspects of the national issue as well.
In addition to social historians and those intrigued by the
state's colorful past, anyone interested in alcohol studies,
sociology, and public policy questions will also find this a
model study.
"Bader explores the history of an issue still very much
alive, and does so with remarkable ability. . . . A model study."--Mark
Lender, author of Drinking in America: A History and
The Dictionary of American Temperance Biography
"Bader's treatment of this complicated subject represents
a substantial research achievement, made the more remarkable
by his eye for the salient detail, his talent as a social historian,
his lively writing style, and his sense of humor."--Craig
Miner, author of West of Wichita: Settling the High Plains
of Kansas, 1865-1890
ROBERT SMITH BADER is the author of Hayseeds,
Moralizers, and Methodists: The Twentieth-Century Image of Kansas,
and The Great Kansas Bond Scandal.
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