To mark today's 75th anniversary of the Works Progress Administration, here's a roundup of blog postings around, from
Illinois,
New York and
Pennsylvania to
southern Texas, where Zora Neale Hurston's niece Lucy Ann Hurston will be speaking in a few days. There's also an artful selection of WPA posters
here to commemorate the date. And in two days
an exhibit celebrating the WPA legacy in California will open in Berkeley, and will run through August.
On the policy front, bloggers from
Deepak Bhargava to
Sarah VonEsch and
The Progressive Pulse call for something like WPA's jobs program to address today's unemployment crisis, citing local movements and national initiatives, including
Jobs for America Now. There are plans for a march for jobs next month. Which all points to the currency of that history in the dialogue about our present.
John Wiley & Sons, the publisher of
Soul of a People
, plans to issue a digital edition of the book this spring, and the Smithsonian Channel will release the dvd of
Soul of a People: Writing America's Story on June 29th.
I am part of a project in which we are bringing back the WPA, because the government hasn't! After frustration with the bailouts and stimuli of 2009 that seemed to leave so many Americans feeling disconnected, we decided to bring the Work Projects Administration back ourselves!
ReplyDeletehttp://bit.ly/wpa-kickstarter
We have started by opening two WPA offices - one in a rural hamlet, and one in an urban center - to do government recovery driven by the neighborhood itself.
Perhaps we can collaborate...
For more info and to support the new WPA:
http://bit.ly/wpa-kickstarter