William Deverell (1) (1962–)
Auteur van Railroad Crossing: Californians and the Railroad, 1850-1910
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William Deverell (1) via een alias veranderd in William Francis Deverell.
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Titels zijn toegeschreven aan William Francis Deverell.
From the Outside Looking In: Essays on Mormon History, Theology, and Culture (2015) — Medewerker — 7 exemplaren
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Deverell continues, “Because the railroad – and… one railroad in particular – was the prevailing symbol of corporate capitalism in the West, it was assumed that actions aimed at curbing the railroad’s influence would naturally permeate through the society and touch every commercial activity in the state” (pg. 42). Further, “Not only did potential reformers have to confront corporate power; they had to overcome a powerful assumption on the part of many that railroad antagonism equaled economic if not political revolution. One way to overcome that assumption, as exemplified by a movement that sprang up among the working class in San Francisco, was the resort to a traditional rallying cry and a staple of American political culture: the imperilment of liberty” (pg. 42).
In the second half of his monograph, Deverell revises current historical thinking. For example, in discussing the contest of the Los Angeles harbor, Deverell writes, “The free harbor fight demonstrates that the Southern Pacific Railroad was not the all-powerful entity it has been made out to be. It did at times face significant opposition. Yet scholarly inquiries must critically assess the motivations of those who battled the railroad corporation. Matching the harbor fight personnel with later Progressive-era reform movements in itself proves little. Nor does painting the pro-San Pedro activists as selfless urban populists tell us much about their actions or motivations” (pg. 121). Deverell also counters the current consensus of Frank Norris’s 1901 novel, The Octopus: A Story of California. Deverell writes, “The novel fails at what may historians have claimed it to be, a reliable depiction of the railroad corporation’s ruthlessness and an extraordinary instance of anti-railroad conflict. But that shortcoming, something Norris would himself have admitted, does not mean that the novel is useless as a tool for adding to our historical understanding” (pg. 144). He primarily cautions against viewing railroad antagonism in California as easily representative of industrial change and upheaval throughout the nation, pointing out that the nature of opposition was “breathtakingly varied” (pg. 173). Deverell’s work will interest California historians and those examining nineteenth-century industrialization and its social impact.… (meer)