John Steinbeck’s Grapes of Wrath (1939) is not the only Depression-era work worth taking a second (or a first) look at from our current perspective in what some are calling the New Depression. Common themes found in the literature and film of the period are despair, poverty, corruption, strife between labor and management, the need to work together
and the desire to escape, notes Miles Orvell, professor of English and American Studies
at Temple University. Does any of this sound familiar? If you’re looking to deepen your understanding of how Americans weathered the global financial crisis of the 1930s, Orvell recommends the following: - Let
Us Now Praise Famous Men (1941), James Agee and Walker Evans
“Produced by a writer and photographer as part of an assignment from Fortune magazine, this book is extraordinary not only for the way it meticulously describes the day-to-day life of southern tenant farmers in Alabama, but also for its honest portrayal of how one social class views another during the heart of the ‘30s.”
- Miss Lonelyhearts (1933) and The
Day of the Locust (1939), Nathaniel West
“West invents black humor to portray, in Lonelyhearts, the dilemma of a ‘Dear Abby’ columnist dealing with the troubles of all of his letter-writers and, in Locust, to contrast the lives of those at the fringes of Hollywood with those at its center.”
- Come Back to Sorrento (1932), Dawn Powell
“Powell, one of the great unrecognized writers of the 30’s, beautifully describes the quiet despair of people living in a small town, with their dreams thwarted.”
- They Shoot Horses, Don’t They (1935), Horace
McCoy
“This is also a good movie, starring Jane Fonda, but a great book set near Hollywood during a grueling dance marathon about the need for hope.”
- Call It Sleep (1934), Henry Roth:
“Roth offers us the interior perspective of a young immigrant boy growing up in the slums of New York.”
“And for the truly ambitious, I recommend the John Dos Passos trilogy U.S.A., which covers the three decades leading to the Crash.”
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