Old South, New South
revolutions in the southern economy since the Civil War
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Word Count
80,250 words, Guess
Page Count
321 pages
Identifiers
- Internet Archiveoldsouthnewsouth0000wrig
- ISBN-100465051936
- ISBN-139780465051939
- LibraryThing523172
- Library of Congress Control Number85043106
and 2 more
- OCLC Control Number12956329
- Open LibraryOL2551107M
Classifications
- DDC330.975/04
- LCCHC107.A13 W67 1986
Description
An original and economically rigorous analysis of the role of slavery in generating economic "backwardness." Wright traces key reasons for the South's century-long status as a second-class country-within-a-country, and assesses the legacy of slavery, the material devastation and social upheaval of the Civil War, and the colonial exploitation of the South by northern capital. He maintains that above all the defining feature of the southern economy was the isolation of its labor market from national and international development. On this basis, Wright explains the sharecropping system, the Populist revolt, the South's limited investment in the education of its own people, and the low-skill, low-productivity, "colonial" character of the region's industrial progress. Only the intervention of the Federal Government during the Great Depression, the author argues, destroyed the bases of the South's low-wage economy, led to long-delayed mechanization of the plantation, helped close the North-South wage gap, and created massive out-migration of unskilled labor during and after World War II. With the demise of the plantation regime, the South opened its doors to outside flows of capital and labor.
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Other Editions
- Old South, New South: revolutions in the southern economy since the Civil War
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