![]() ![]() A Marxist analysis of the lumpenproletariat this is not, but Isenberg’s expertise particularly shines in the examinations of early America, and every chapter is riveting. ![]() In the book’s final section, a delectable mixture of political and popular culture, Isenberg analyzes the “white trash” makeover of the late 20th century thanks to movies such as Smokey and the Bandit, politicians Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton, and Jim and Tammy Faye Bakker’s televangelism. Eugenics entered the conversation in an early 20th-century effort to breed out misfits and undesirables, and the Great Depression forced reevaluations of poverty and what it meant to be a “poor white” in the 1930s. ![]() Isenberg then shows how words such as squatter, cracker, and white trash are rooted in public discussions over politics and land. White Trash: The 400-Year Untold History of Class in America. Nancy Isenbergs new book, White Trash, argues that the notion of a classless society is a myth that hides an ugly truth about how we view the poor. Colonization and expansion were accomplished because elites believed the poor were valuable only for the labor they provided for the nation. ![]() Isenberg ( Fallen Founder: The Life of Aaron Burr), professor of history at Louisiana State University, tackles a topic rarely addressed by mainstream American writing on race and class as she skillfully demonstrates that “class defines how real people live.” Opening with a myth-busting origin story, Isenberg reveals the ways English class divisions were transplanted and embraced in the colonies at the expense of the lower classes. ![]()
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