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After the Factory: Reinventing America's Industrial Small Cities

Contributor(s): Bednarek, Janet R Daly (Contribution by), Dieterich-Ward, Allen (Contribution by), Goebel, Alison D (Contribution by), Hicks, Michael J (Contribution by), Lehman, Thomas E (Contribution by), O'Hara, S Paul (Contribution by), Tumber, Catherine (Contribution by), Winling, Ladale (Contribution by), Connolly, James J (Editor)

ISBN: 9780739148235

Publisher: Lexington Books

Hardcover
$130.00
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Pub Date: October 14, 2010

Dewey: 307.34160973

LCCN: 2010024291

Lexile Code: 0000

Features: Bibliography, Dust Cover, Index, Maps, Table of Contents

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.90" H x 9.10" L x 6.10" W ( 1.14 lbs) 254 pages

BISAC Categories:

Social Science | Sociology | Urban

Series: Comparative Urban Studies

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description: After the Factory expores the challenges and opportunities facing the smaller industrial cities of America's heartland as they seek to reinvent themselves. It offers a unique, multidisciplinary look at communities often ignored by conventional urban studies and urban history scholarship.

Review Quotes: "This compendium of essays looking at the impact of the new US economy upon the country's small to medium industrial cities asks whether or not such urban centers can make a successful transition to the global economy of the 21st century. Contributors examine smaller 20th-century industrial towns like Gary, Indiana, and Steubenville, Ohio, and the relationships to their larger, better-known regional powerhouses like Chicago and Pittsburgh. The essays trace the origins of the industries in the smaller cities as well as the problems confronting these cities in an era of deindustrialization in the late-20th-century US. The authors do a good job enumerating the challenges posed by change and describe the intellectual, cultural, and economic resources, or lack thereof, possessed by each individual city in meeting those challenges. An underlying theme is the complexity of the problems facing the cities involved. The book proffers a new way of tackling those problems through a more regional approach that moves away from the earlier urban model of a 'Darwinian' competition among cities. A useful contribution to urban historiography. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates and above." --Choice

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