Visions of Belonging: Family Stories, Popular Culture, and Postwar Democracy, 1940-1960

Visions of Belonging explores how beloved and still-remembered family stories—A Tree Grows in Brooklyn, I Remember Mama, Gentleman's Agreement, Death of a Salesman, Marty, and A Raisin in the Sun—entered the popular imagination and shaped collective dreams in the postwar years and into the 1950s. These stories helped define widely shared conceptions of who counted as representative Americans and who could be recognized as belonging.

The book listens in as white and black authors and directors, readers and viewers reveal divergent, emotionally textured, and politically charged social visions. Their diverse perspectives provide a point of entry into an extraordinary time when the possibilities for social transformation seemed boundless. But changes were also fiercely contested, especially as the war's culture of unity receded in the resurgence of cold war anticommunism, and demands for racial equality were met with intensifying white resistance. Judith E. Smith traces the cultural trajectory of these family stories, as they circulated widely in bestselling paperbacks, hit movies, and popular drama on stage, radio, and television.

Visions of Belonging provides unusually close access to a vibrant conversation among white and black Americans about the boundaries between public life and family matters and the meanings of race and ethnicity. Would the new appearance of white working class ethnic characters expand Americans'understanding of democracy? Would these stories challenge the color line? How could these stories simultaneously show that black families belonged to the larger "family" of the nation while also representing the forms of danger and discriminations that excluded them from full citizenship? In the 1940s, war-driven challenges to racial and ethnic borderlines encouraged hesitant trespass against older notions of "normal." But by the end of the 1950s, the cold war cultural atmosphere discouraged probing of racial and social inequality and ultimately turned family stories into a comforting retreat from politics.

The book crosses disciplinary boundaries, suggesting a novel method for cultural history by probing the social history of literary, dramatic, and cinematic texts. Smith's innovative use of archival research sets authorial intent next to audience reception to show how both contribute to shaping the contested meanings of American belonging.

1117317477
Visions of Belonging: Family Stories, Popular Culture, and Postwar Democracy, 1940-1960

Visions of Belonging explores how beloved and still-remembered family stories—A Tree Grows in Brooklyn, I Remember Mama, Gentleman's Agreement, Death of a Salesman, Marty, and A Raisin in the Sun—entered the popular imagination and shaped collective dreams in the postwar years and into the 1950s. These stories helped define widely shared conceptions of who counted as representative Americans and who could be recognized as belonging.

The book listens in as white and black authors and directors, readers and viewers reveal divergent, emotionally textured, and politically charged social visions. Their diverse perspectives provide a point of entry into an extraordinary time when the possibilities for social transformation seemed boundless. But changes were also fiercely contested, especially as the war's culture of unity receded in the resurgence of cold war anticommunism, and demands for racial equality were met with intensifying white resistance. Judith E. Smith traces the cultural trajectory of these family stories, as they circulated widely in bestselling paperbacks, hit movies, and popular drama on stage, radio, and television.

Visions of Belonging provides unusually close access to a vibrant conversation among white and black Americans about the boundaries between public life and family matters and the meanings of race and ethnicity. Would the new appearance of white working class ethnic characters expand Americans'understanding of democracy? Would these stories challenge the color line? How could these stories simultaneously show that black families belonged to the larger "family" of the nation while also representing the forms of danger and discriminations that excluded them from full citizenship? In the 1940s, war-driven challenges to racial and ethnic borderlines encouraged hesitant trespass against older notions of "normal." But by the end of the 1950s, the cold war cultural atmosphere discouraged probing of racial and social inequality and ultimately turned family stories into a comforting retreat from politics.

The book crosses disciplinary boundaries, suggesting a novel method for cultural history by probing the social history of literary, dramatic, and cinematic texts. Smith's innovative use of archival research sets authorial intent next to audience reception to show how both contribute to shaping the contested meanings of American belonging.

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Visions of Belonging: Family Stories, Popular Culture, and Postwar Democracy, 1940-1960

Visions of Belonging: Family Stories, Popular Culture, and Postwar Democracy, 1940-1960

by Judith Smith
Visions of Belonging: Family Stories, Popular Culture, and Postwar Democracy, 1940-1960

Visions of Belonging: Family Stories, Popular Culture, and Postwar Democracy, 1940-1960

by Judith Smith

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Overview

Visions of Belonging explores how beloved and still-remembered family stories—A Tree Grows in Brooklyn, I Remember Mama, Gentleman's Agreement, Death of a Salesman, Marty, and A Raisin in the Sun—entered the popular imagination and shaped collective dreams in the postwar years and into the 1950s. These stories helped define widely shared conceptions of who counted as representative Americans and who could be recognized as belonging.

The book listens in as white and black authors and directors, readers and viewers reveal divergent, emotionally textured, and politically charged social visions. Their diverse perspectives provide a point of entry into an extraordinary time when the possibilities for social transformation seemed boundless. But changes were also fiercely contested, especially as the war's culture of unity receded in the resurgence of cold war anticommunism, and demands for racial equality were met with intensifying white resistance. Judith E. Smith traces the cultural trajectory of these family stories, as they circulated widely in bestselling paperbacks, hit movies, and popular drama on stage, radio, and television.

Visions of Belonging provides unusually close access to a vibrant conversation among white and black Americans about the boundaries between public life and family matters and the meanings of race and ethnicity. Would the new appearance of white working class ethnic characters expand Americans'understanding of democracy? Would these stories challenge the color line? How could these stories simultaneously show that black families belonged to the larger "family" of the nation while also representing the forms of danger and discriminations that excluded them from full citizenship? In the 1940s, war-driven challenges to racial and ethnic borderlines encouraged hesitant trespass against older notions of "normal." But by the end of the 1950s, the cold war cultural atmosphere discouraged probing of racial and social inequality and ultimately turned family stories into a comforting retreat from politics.

The book crosses disciplinary boundaries, suggesting a novel method for cultural history by probing the social history of literary, dramatic, and cinematic texts. Smith's innovative use of archival research sets authorial intent next to audience reception to show how both contribute to shaping the contested meanings of American belonging.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780231509268
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Publication date: 09/01/2004
Series: Popular Cultures, Everyday Lives
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 480
File size: 10 MB

About the Author

Judith E. Smith is professor of American studies at University of Massachusetts Boston and the author of Family Connections: A History of Italian and Jewish Immigrant Lives in Providence, Rhode Island, 1900-1940.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Part 1. Ordinary Families, Popular Culture, and Popular Democracy, 1935-1945
Radio's Formula Drama
Popular Theater and Popular Democracy
Popular Democracy on the Radio
Popular Democracy in Wartime: Multiethnic and Multiracial?
Representing the Soldier
The New World of the Home Front
Soldiers as Veterans: Imagining the Postwar World
Looking Back Stories
Part 2. Making the Working-Class Family Ordinary: A Tree Grows in Brooklyn
From Working-Class Daughter to Working-Class Writer
Revising 1930s Radical Visions
Remembering a Working-Class Past
Instructing the Middle Class
The Ethnic and Racial Boundaries of the Ordinary
Making Womanhood Ordinary
Hollywood Revises A Tree Grows in Brooklyn
The Declining Appeal of Tree's Social Terrain
Part 3. Home Front Harmony and Remembering Mama
"Mama's Bank Account" and Other Ethnic Working-Class Fictions
Remembering Mama on the Stage
The Mother Next Door on Film, 1947-1948
Mama on CBS, 1949-1956
The Appeal of TV Mama's Ordinary Family
"Trading Places" Stories
Part 4. Loving Across Prewar Racial and Sexual Boundaries
Lillian Smith and Strange Fruit
Quality Reinstates the Color Line
Strange Fruit as Failed Social Drama
The Returning Negro Soldier, Interracial Romance, and Deep Are the Roots
Interracial Male Homosociability in Home of the Brave
Part 5. "Seeing Through" Jewishness
Perception and Racial Boundaries in Focus
Policing Racial and Gender Boundaries in The Brick Foxhole
Recasting the Victim in Crossfire
Deracializing Jewishness in Gentleman's Agreement
Part 6. Hollywood Makes Race (In)Visible
"A Great Step Forward": The Film Home of the Brave
Lost Boundaries: Racial Indeterminacy as Whiteness
Pinky: Racial Indeterminacy as Blackness
Trading Places or No Way Out?
Everyman Stories
Part 7. Competing Postwar Representations of Universalism
The "Truly Universal People": Richard Durham's Destination Freedom
The Evolution of Arthur Miller's Ordinary Family
Miller's Search for "the People," 1947-1948
The Creation of an Ordinary American Tragedy: Death of a Salesman
The Rising Tide of Anticommunism
Part 8. Marital Realism and Everyman Love Stories
Marital Realism Before and After the Blacklist
The Promise of Live Television Drama
Paddy Chayefsky's Everyman Ethnicity
Conservative and Corporate Constraints on Representing the Ordinary
Filming Television's "Ordinary": Marty's Everyman Romance
Part 9. Reracializing the Ordinary American Family: Raisin in the Sun
Lorraine Hansberry's South Side Childhood
Leaving Home, Stepping "Deliberately Against the Beat"
The Freedom Family and the Black Left
"I Am a Writer": Hansberry in Greenwich Village
Raisin in the Sun: Hansberry's Conception, Audience Reception
Frozen in the Frame: The Film of Raisin
Visions of Belonging
Notes
Index

What People are Saying About This

George Lipsitz

This is a wonderful book. There is a brilliant specificity to this project; Smith's re-readings of well known texts reveal just how much cultural expressions of this era wittingly and unwittingly registered the time period's enormous social transformations. Her work explores the links between patriarchy and patriotism by showing how cultural stories about the family make citizenship legible and credible to ordinary people.

Christine Stansell

There is nothing else like this wonderful book among histories of post-World War II America. In the aftermath of the great victory against fascism and on through the darkening 1950s, playwrights, TV scriptwriters, film directors, bestselling novelists and their enraptured audiences struggled to reimagine the American Everyman and Everywoman and in the process reconceive the country. As she investigates the riches of popular culture high and low, Judith Smith captures both the hopefulness and myopia of their moment. Visions of Belonging is an extraordinary blend of tenderness and intellectual power.

Lizabeth Cohen

Judith Smith takes the major popular culture texts of the postwar era--such as I Remember Mama, A Raisin in the Sun, A Tree Grows in Brooklyn, and Death of a Salesman--and brilliantly reveals how much they have to say about prevailing attitudes toward ethnicity, gender, class, race, sexuality, family, and national identity. Reading this book was a revelation to me.

David Roediger

We have grown so accustomed to sharing the pain, laughter, and triumphs of 'ordinary families'--from the Waltons to the Osbournes--in U.S. popular culture that it is easy to suppose such imagined intimacies have always existed. Judith Smith profoundly shows us that such visions of belonging not only have a history, but one that redefines the broader stories of world war and cold war, of liberalism and the left, and, above all, of the definitive ways that the popular became multiethnic and the ambiguous ways that it became interracial.

Kevin Gaines

Judith Smith skillfully demonstrates how central issues of race and the inclusion of African Americans in American democracy were to the postwar period. Her vivid and absorbing account of the narratives and representations of the American family in the literature, film, and television productions of the period provide an insightful new way to understand the contest for democracy in the twentieth century.

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