by Steven Biel (Author)
I suggest, henceforth, when a woman talks women's rights, she be answered with the word Titanic, nothing more-just Titanic, wrote a St. Louis man to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. He was not alone in mining the ship for a metaphor. Everyone found ammunition in the Titanic-suffragists and their opponents; radicals, reformers, and capitalists; critics of technology and modern life; racists and xenophobes and champions of racial and ethnic equality; editorial writers and folk singers, preachers and poets.
Protestant sermons used the Titanic to condemn the budding consumer society ( We know the end of . . . the undisturbed sensualists. As they sail the sea of life we know absolutely that their ship will meet disaster. ). African American toasts and working-class ballads made the ship emblematic of the foolishness of white people and the greed of the rich. A 1950s revival framed the disaster as an older kind of disaster in which people had time to die. An ever-increasing number of Titanic buffs find heroism and order in the tale. Still in the headlines ( Titanic Baby Found Alive! the Weekly World News declares) and a figure of everyday speech ( rearranging deck chairs . . . ), the Titanic disaster echoes within a richly diverse, paradoxical, and fascinating America.
Format: Illustrated
Pages: 320
Edition: Illustrated
Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company
Published: 31 Dec 1997
ISBN 10: 0393316769
ISBN 13: 9780393316766