![]() ![]() Penned soon after the facts it records, this is a 'first rough draft of history' that effectively puts the reader inside the 1920s, when Prohibition reigned and Al Capone ruled, when business boosterism reached levels of comic absurdity and 'Babbittry' became a word. ![]() ![]() These blind spots are mostly outweighed, however, by the book's journalistic immediacy. This is not a work of 'history from above,' and Allen should be commended for breaking with that long-standing tradition, but nor is it Zinn-like 'history from below' it's definitely written from and to the Oreo-white 'middle' of Twenties and Thirties America. The white working class is likewise marginalized, portrayed alternately as an either too-violent or too-complacent mob. And within that parenthesis is the rub. For Allen largely concerns himself with the white urban bourgeoisie, and his book seriously slights African-American culture, completely ignoring the Harlem Renaissance writers and only superficially mentioning jazz. This cultural portrait of manic Twenties America as seen from the depressive early Thirties remains an essential text for anyone who wants to understand the texture of life among (mostly white, mostly middle-class) Americans in the 1920s. Originally published in 1931, Only Yesterday has aged remarkably well. ![]()
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