• A Giant Listening Project

  • Jul 3 2024
  • Duración: 25 m
  • Podcast

  • Resumen

  • It’s been called ‘the most noble and absurd undertaking ever attempted by any state.’ During the height of the Great Depression, the U.S government hired out-of-work writers and laid-off reporters and sent them out to record the stories of all kinds of Americans. Called the Federal Writers’ Project, historians have called the program a giant “listening project.”

    While on our summer break, we’re sharing the first episode of a new podcast series called The People’s Recorder. Host Chris Haley sets the stage, laying out 1930s America, the New Deal, and the cultural forces that both supported and opposed the Writers’ Project. The project of holding up to America raises questions: What history gets told? And who gets to tell it?

    You can listen to rest of the series by searching for The People’s Recorder wherever you get your podcasts. Find out more at peoplesrecorder.info

    Guests:

    Scott Borchert, author

    David Bradley, novelist

    Dr. Douglas Brinkley, historian

    Dr. Tameka Hobbs, historian

    David Kipen, author

    Dena Epstein, daughter of Hilda Polacheck

    Studs Terkel, oral historian

    Links and Resources:

    American Life Histories: Manuscripts from the Federal Writers' Project

    Born to Slavery: Slave Narratives from the Federal Writers' Project

    Author Scott Borchert on the Federal Writers' Project and the WPA guidebooks

    Article on Library on Congress symposium on The Millions

    Further Reading

    Soul of a People by David A. Taylor

    Republic of Detours by Scott Borchert

    California in the 1930s by David Kipen

    First Person America by Ann Banks

    Henry Alsberg by Susan DeMasi

    Long Past Slavery by Catherine A. Stewart

    Barracoon by Zora Neale Hurston

    Hard Times by Studs Terkel

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