A Taste of the Country

A Taste of the Country

by Calvin Beale (Author), PeterA.Morrison (Editor)

Synopsis

In the 1970s, Americans rediscovered rural areas and, in increasing numbers, took up residence there. Many people, it seems, want to be where earlier generations wanted to be from. With the repopulation of rural areas, the diversity and distinctiveness of an earlier rural America is fading. Broad outlines will remain, but many details will disappear. This book records and interprets that detail as it has been served by Calvin L. Beale, chief demographer of the U.S. Department of Agriculture since the late 1950s.

Beale has devoted his professional career--and also much of his spare time--to studying rural areas and their inhabitants. Since the 1950s, he has studied places that most urban Americans have not seen and do not know: the Mississippi Delta, the Ozark-Ouachita Uplands, Appalachia, and the Corn, Cotton, Tobacco, and Peanut Belts. His observations and interpretations offer an uncommon taste of this country and the directions of change that are underway.

Peter A. Morrison has assembled Beale's most insightful writings on the nation's subregions and on how rural people live their lives. The passages afford factual information enriched by the author's insights into the transformations of rural America. Chapters highlighting four aspects of rural commonality and diversity are captured in his writings: the regional settings, the towns and communities, the people, and the transformations underway in all three.

For generations in our national life, progress was the preserve of cities, Beale wrote in 1981. Inventions, standards of services, and social styles and trends lagged in their adoption in rural areas. The countryside was a time machine in which urbanites could see the living past, and feel nostalgic or superior, as the sight inclined them. Calvin L. Beale headed the Population Section of the Department of Agriculture's Economic Research Service in Washington, D.C., where he is now Senior Demographer. His research has focused on rural, regional, and ethnic trends and composition. He is author or coauthor of The Revival of Population Growth in Nonmetropolitan America, Rural Development in Perspective, and Economic Areas of the United States.

$41.98

Quantity

20+ in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 264
Publisher: Pennsylvania State University Press
Published: 01 Jan 2002

ISBN 10: 0271022787
ISBN 13: 9780271022789

Author Bio

Peter A. Morrison is on the senior staff of The RAND Corporation and is director of RAND's Population Research Center in Santa Monica, California. He is author or coauthor of The Prism of Migration, How Demographers Can Help Legislators, and Demographic Challenges in America's Future.