Two Weeks Every Summer
Fresh Air Children and the Problem of Race in America
by Tobin Miller Shearer
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Pub Date Apr 11 2017 | Archive Date Apr 25 2017
Description
Two Weeks Every Summer, which is based on extensive oral history interviews with former guests, hosts, and administrators in Fresh Air programs, opens a new chapter in the history of race in the United States by showing how the actions of hundreds of thousands of rural and suburban residents who hosted children from the city perpetuated racial inequity rather than overturned it. Since 1877 and to this day, Fresh Air programs from Maine to Montana have brought inner-city children to rural and suburban homes for two-week summer vacations. Tobin Miller Shearer brings to the forefront of his history of the Fresh Air program the voices of the children themselves through letters that they wrote, pictures that they took, and their testimonials. Shearer offers a careful social and cultural history of the Fresh Air programs, giving readers a good sense of the summer experiences for both hosts and the visiting children. By covering the racially transformative years between 1939 and 1979, Shearer shows how the rhetoric of innocence employed by Fresh Air boosters largely served the interests of religiously minded white hosts and did little to offer more than a vacation for African American and Latino urban youth. In what could have been a new arena for the civil rights movement, white adults often overpowered the courageous actions of children of color. By giving white suburbanites and rural residents a safe race relations project that did not require adjustments to their investment portfolios, real estate holdings, or political affiliations, the programs perpetuated an economic order that marginalized African Americans and Latinos by suggesting that solutions to poverty lay in one-on-one acts of charity.
Advance Praise
"For years, I saw appeals for the Fresh Air Fund in the New York Times
and never knew what it was. Now I do. Two Weeks Every Summer is a
provocative, critical analysis of a heretofore unexamined subject in the
history of childhood and race relations. Tobin Miller Shearer convinces
us that the Fresh Air program was important. In this well-argued book,
he illuminates many timely themes: attempts to improve race relations,
the construction of childhood innocence, and concepts of the importance
of the experience of nature in children's lives."—Barbara Beatty,
Wellesley College, author of Preschool Education in America: The Culture of Young Children from the Colonial Era to the Present
Available Editions
EDITION | Other Format |
ISBN | 9781501707452 |
PRICE | $35.00 (USD) |
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