What have depictions of the working class in popular culture added to our understanding of the professional lives of Americans?
Scenes from the American Working Class: This Hard Land offers twelve unique and profound answers from some of the most impactful and timeless novels (
O! Pioneers,
Ann Vickers, and
Native Son), films (
Blue Collar,
Wall Street, and
Other People's Money), television shows (
The Wire and
Mad Men), songs (the work of Bruce Springsteen), and poems (Natasha Tretheway's "
Drapery Factory, Gulfport, Mississippi, 1956").
Key themes include the turn from agrarianism to industrialism and post-industrialism; the challenges particular to women, new immigrants, and workers of color; and the relationship between the demands of the workplace and the responsibilities of citizens in a democracy. Also explored is the extent to which having a productive and fulfilling working life is essential to living a life of meaning and purpose.
Although there is a significant gap between the rhetoric and the reality of the "American dream," these portrayals all give a glimpse into the resiliency and optimism of workers and why the country continues to be a land of hope.