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New Books: March

Lists new books monthly

March 2025

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New Books: March

The Farm Security Administration and Rural Rehabilitation in the South

HD 1773 A5 R63 2015

This book fills an important void in the historical literature on New Deal reform and significantly updates Sidney Baldwin's 1968 book on the FSA. Through the lens of the programs of the FSA, Charles Kenneth Roberts does an excellent job of relating how New Deal programs attempted to rehabilitate poor, rural southerners." --Aaron D. Purcell, author of Arthur Morgan: A Progressive Vision for American Reform As the roaring twenties turned into the depressed thirties, southern farmers, far removed from the urban prosperity Americans had enjoyed during the 1920s heyday, found already difficult farming conditions greatly intensified by the onset of the Great Depression. Agricultural incompetence plagued the rural South through the misuse of land, depletion of natural resources, and a system of single-crop farming that failed to adequately provide for growing families on small farms, especially in the cotton-producing Southeast. Poverty and desperation came to define the farming communities of the rural South, both in reality and in Americans' collective conscious. In The Farm Security Administration and Rural Rehabilitation in the South, Charles Kenneth Roberts traces the administrative and political history of the Farm Security Administration (FSA) and reconciles the administration's goals with Franklin D. Roosevelt's overall vision for the New Deal. Roberts takes a grassroots approach to dissecting the FSA's history. While other studies have focused on FSA photography or community building, or even policy making in terms of top-down government directives, Roberts focuses on the people and state governments who faced an immediate need to aid southern farmers within their own borders and to boost their states' crumbling agricultural economic bases. Roberts focuses on rural rehabilitation as a key aspect of the FSA and defines the agency's legacy not in terms of its failures but rather in terms of an idealistic program whose modest successes were ultimately too few to effect real change for southern farmers. Though Roosevelt failed to adequately recognize the plight of the southern farmer and political infighting hindered many of the administration's goals, the creation of the FSA stands as one of the first efforts to provide sustained relief to struggling southern farmers. In light of other federal programs of the era, the FSA may seem like a mere footnote to the New Deal outside of its small but revered photography program. But, as Roberts shows, the FSA's legacy has endured to the present day. Charles Kenneth Roberts is a lecturer in history at Georgia Perimeter College. His articles have appeared in the Alabama Review, Southern Historian, and Agricultural History.

Until Our Lungs Give Out

E 185.615 Y35 2023

A 2023 Library Journal Best Social Sciences Title A 2024 Choice Reviews Outstanding Academic Title From Library Journal's Starred Review: "All readers stand to learn something from this compelling book." Award-winning author, scholar, and social visionary George Yancy brings together the greatest minds of our time to speak truth to power and welcome everyone into a conversation about the pursuit of justice, equality, and peace. This interwoven collection of searingly honest interviews with leading intellectuals includes conversations with Noam Chomsky, Judith Butler, Cornel West, Robin D. G. Kelley, and Peter McLaren. Each conversation bears witness to the weighty moment in which it was first conducted and presented by Truthout and Tikkun magazines while pointing to ramifications, future hurdles, and practical optimism for moving forward. Learning how to speak about such topics as white supremacy and global whiteness, xenophobia, anti-BIPOC racism, fear of critical race theory, and the importance of Black feminist and trans perspectives, readers will be better able to join future conversations with their peers, those in power, and those who need to be empowered to change the status quo.

Seven Social Movements That Changed America

HN 57 G67 2025

How do social movements arise, wield power, and bring about meaningful change? Renowned scholar Linda Gordon investigates these and other salient questions in this "visionary, cautionary, timely, and utterly necessary book" (Nicole Eustace), narrating how some of America's most influential twentieth-century social movements transformed the nation. Beginning with the turn-of-the century settlement house movement, the book compares Chicago's celebrated Hull-House, begun by privileged women, to a much less well known African American project, Cleveland's Phillis Wheatley House, begun by a former sharecropper. Expanding her highly praised book The Second Coming of the KKK, the second chapter shows how a northern Klan became a mass movement in the 1920s. Contrary to what many Klan opponents thought, this KKK was a middle-class organization, its members primarily urban and well educated. In the 1930s, the KKK gave birth to dozens of American fascist groups--small but extremely violent. Profiles of two other 1930s movements follow: the Townsend campaign for old-age insurance, named for its charismatic leader, Dr. Francis Townsend. It created the public pressure that brought us Social Security, which was considered radical at the time, as was the movement to bring about federal unemployment aid for millions. Proceeding to the 1955-1956 Montgomery bus boycott--which jump-started the career of Martin Luther King, Jr.--the narrative shows how the city's entire Black population refused to ride segregated buses; initiated by Black women, their years-long, hard-fought victory inspired the civil rights movement. Gordon then examines the 1970s farmworkers struggle, led by Cesar Chavez and made possible by the work of tens of thousands of the primarily Mexican American farmworkers. Together they built the United Farm Workers Union, winning better wages and working conditions for some of the country's poorest workers. The book concludes with the dramatic stories of two Boston socialist feminist groups, Bread and Roses and the Combahee River Collective, which influenced the whole women's liberation movement. Throughout the work, Gordon concentrates not on ideologies but on how millions of grassroots activists strategized and changed the United States. Separately and together, these seven narratives bring to life the creativity and hard work of social movements, and in doing so reveal how they have been central to American history, in stories that reverberate with today's political activism.

Grit & Joy

BV 4529 R34 G75 2025

In a world where teens are constantly chasing after surface-level distractions, they're left yearning for something deeper--a joy that doesn't fade with the next trend. Grit & Joy: Help for Bewildered Families of Teens is the guide that helps parents and mentors step in and offer the kind of joy that comes from a lasting, authentic faith. Grit & Joy takes readers on a journey to disrupt the pace of life that's been draining us all. They show how we can move from the frantic rhythms of modern life to a pace that invites us--and our teens--to experience the joy of a life with Jesus. This isn't just about slowing down; it's about making space for the deeper things that matter. Through practical advice, powerful stories, and a blend of social science, brain science, and biblical wisdom, Grit & Joy offers a roadmap for parents and mentors who want to help teens build lasting, authentic joy. This book provides specific strategies for guiding adolescents toward a deeper, more meaningful faith--one that will carry them through life's challenges and help them thrive. Each chapter includes discussion questions to help adults model a deeper, more authentic faith for the teens in their life. These questions are designed to help families pause, reflect, and engage with the material in a way that fosters deeper understanding and connection. What's at stake? Teens who are caught in the trap of shallow living. But through this book, parents and mentors can learn to model a deeper faith--one that leads to joy and roots their kids in a lasting legacy.

Mystery of the Ordinary

BV 4529 T39 M97 2025

In a world quick to tell us what to achieve but slow to show us how to connect, parenting can feel like a mystery. What if you had a guide to help you cut through the noise, showing you how to speak life into your children with purpose and love? Introducing The Mystery of The Ordinary: 8 Statements Your Kids Need to Hear... And Why!--a book designed to help you meet your children's deepest emotional and spiritual needs. Inside you'll discover eight essential statements that every parent should communicate to their children, including affirming their sense of belonging, recognizing their presence, and offering unconditional forgiveness--essential for building emotional and spiritual well-being. Each chapter tackles the real-life barriers--like cultural lies and assumptions--that can impact family dynamics. And instead of leaving you with theory, it guides you with scriptural wisdom and practical steps. This book includes a personal Likert Scale assessment--a simple tool to evaluate your family dynamics, highlighting areas of strength and those needing attention. You'll also find thought-provoking questions at the end of each chapter, perfect for small groups or personal reflection, creating space to apply what you're learning. The Mystery of The Ordinary is more than a book, it's an invitation to nurture connections that matter most. For parents, grandparents, mentors, and anyone investing in the next generation, this book offers a blueprint for building a family legacy grounded in love, belonging, and faith. Are you ready to make your words count?

Cataloging & Technical Services Librarian

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Heather Day
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Moye Library, University of Mount Olive
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