<p>I never knew that 'Railroad Bill,' which I used to sing at summer camp, is about an African American outlaw (real name Morris) who terrorized Alabama in the 1890s. People had good reason to fear Bill, but that fear was also used as an excuse for the blatantly racist treatment of people whose only connection to him seems to have been the color of their skin. ('A number of Negroes have been arrested,' Polenberg quotes an 1895 news report. 'None of them will be permitted to go about for fear that they might sneak some information to Railroad.') Many of Polenberg's stories shed similar light on the uglier aspects of American history, and he tells them well.</p>
- Peter Keepnews, New York Times Book Review
<p>Polenberg writes engagingly about the Crescent City at the turn of the last century, as he does about everything he addresses in this entertaining and enlightening book.</p>
- Jerome Clark, fRoots
<p>This thought-provoking study will help us to delve further into the reasons why so many of America's most popular songs have concerned white and male violence while obscuring black agency and side-stepping the terrorism of racism and male supremacy. Perhaps then we can better ask the questions we might have gleaned from these songs all along. Thanks to Richard Polenberg for pulling the covers off and allowing us to think more deeply about our history when we sing the folk songs that tell my sad story.</p>
- Michael K. Honey, Missouri Historical Review
<p>Well researched and packed with fascinating detail, <i>Hear My Sad Story</i> tells more than just the origins of popular folk songs. It tells an unflinching and honest story of America. At times viciously misguided and undoubtedly ugly, the country's history has nevertheless been documented through the lenses of those who witnessed these events and passed them down to subsequent generations. Celebrated in song, the tales outlined through the book’s nearly 300 pages seem poised to continue their grip on the fabric of society as we move further away from the actual events. As history continues to unfold, there are surely those amongst us today whose interpretations of modern events will be relied upon by future songwriters to help make sense of life in our time. It’s the American tradition..</p>
- Jeff Strowe, PopMatters
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
Richard Polenberg is Marie Underhill Noll Professor of History Emeritus at Cornell University. He is the author of Fighting Faiths: The Abrams Case, The Supreme Court, and Free Speech and editor of In the Matter of J. Robert Oppenheimer: The Security Clearance Hearing, both from Cornell.