Cover for BALCH: Lamps at High Noon
Ebook Information

Lamps at High Noon

The Federal Arts Projects were created by FDR in the summer of 1935. A year later, a handful of writers employed in the St. Louis office of the Missouri Writers' Project, including Jack Balch, went out on strike. Lamps at High Noon is the only novel about this strike and the only one to treat comprehensively any aspect of the Federal Writers' Project, whose participants included some of the country's most accomplished and promising authors.

Charlie Gest, the wide-eyed and well-intentioned protagonist of the novel, confronts firsthand the project's sometimes underhanded efforts to monitor the political views of its writers. Named assistant director of the project in Monroe (a fictional St. Louis), Gest is vaguely aware that the program's good intentions do not always overshadow the abuses it tolerates, which include shielding corporate interests and avoiding hiring highly qualified black writers. Gest is hounded by a nagging suspicion that, like lamps that burn in broad daylight, the issues at stake in the work stoppage are not the ones that most need addressing.

Part radical socialist commentary, part absurdist theater, Balch's novel offers a peerless critical engagement of the economic constraints and political exigencies surrounding debates over the federal funding of art since the New Deal.

Washington Post Book World listed as a new paperback edition "by people who weren't afraid to write about the working man, about class and social and economic injustices and other unsexy topics."

To order online:
http://www.press.uillinois.edu/books/catalog/79rnf4kh9780252069390.html

To order by phone:
(800) 621-2736 (USA/Canada)
(773) 702-7000 (International)

Related Titles

previous book next book
Black Flag Boricuas

Anarchism, Antiauthoritarianism, and the Left in Puerto Rico, 1897-1921

Kirwin R. Shaffer

Strange Natures

Futurity, Empathy, and the Queer Ecological Imagination

Nicole Seymour

No Votes for Women

The New York State Anti-Suffrage Movement

Susan Goodier

Defining Deviance

Sex, Science, and Delinquent Girls, 1890-1960

Michael A. Rembis

Yellow Power, Yellow Soul

The Radical Art of Fred Ho

Edited by Roger N. Buckley and Tamara Roberts

Wobblies on the Waterfront

Interracial Unionism in Progressive-Era Philadelphia

Peter Cole

Radical Teacher

Edited by Editorial Collective

History of the Present

Joan W.Scott, Andrew Aisenberg, Brian Connolly, Ben Kafka, Sylvia Schafer, & Mrinalini Sinha

Black Power on Campus

The University of Illinois, 1965-75

Joy Ann Williamson