Bust to Boom
Documentary Photographs of Kansas, 19361949
Edited by Constance B. Schulz
Introduction by Donald Worster
160 pages, 94 photographs, 8 x 9-1/2
Cloth ISBN 978-0-7006-0799-0, $29.95
"I was supposed
to be taking pictures to show that this was a great country and
I was finding out it really was. . . . I didn't know it at the
time, but I was having a last look at America as it used to be."--John
Vachon
Kansans of the 1930s and 1940s lived through more sweeping
changes than any other generation past or present. Destructive
forces of nature, an economy gone awry, and a devastating--and
ironically, economically renewing--war left the world irrevocably
altered. In this captivating collection, some of America's best-known
documentary photographers provide a valuable glimpse into that
tumultuous time.
Constance Schulz has brought together a diverse array of photographs
from three extensive documentary projects: the Farm Security
Administration, the Office of War Information, and Standard Oil
of New Jersey. The result is a unique visual record of American
life by photographers Arthur Rothstein, John Vachon, Russell
Lee, Marion Post Wolcott, Jack Delano, Edwin and Louise Rosskam,
and Charles Rotkin. Collectively, their work has immortalized
the faces and emotions of FSA-aided farmers and the harsh lives
of coal miners, dust-bowl debris and tumbleweeds, a failed bank
and a thriving stockyard, locomotives and Mexican-American railroad
workers, oil derricks, wheat country, black cavalry troops, and
4-H Club fairs.
In his enlightening introduction, environmental historian
Donald Worster provides historical context for the images. Examining
state, national, and international events from 1930 to 1950,
he explores the agricultural, business, social, political, and
environmental climates as well as the composition of the state's
population and its inevitable shift away from rural life toward
urbanization and industrialization. Schulz also supplies fundamental
information on the photographers and the photographic projects.
Originally created as a means to promote government and business
programs, the FSA, OWI, and Standard Oil photographs--most never
before published--are an excellent source for individuals and
communities searching for a visual record of their local heritage
during two of the most crucial decades in American history.
CONSTANCE B. SCHULZ is associate professor of history
at the University of South Carolina, Columbia. She is editor
of South Carolina Album, 19361948: Documentary Photography
in the Palmetto State and image compiler and author of The
American History Videodisc.
DONALD WORSTER is professor of history at the University
of Kansas. His books include The Dust Bowl: An Agricultural
and Social History, Under Western Skies: Nature and History
in the American West, Nature's Economy: A History of Ecological
Ideas, and The Wealth of Nature: Environmental History
and the Ecological Imagination.
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