The Moral Underground
How Ordinary Americans Subvert an Unfair Economy
December 2009
Hardcover · 240 Pages
$24.95 U.S.
ISBN 9781595584724
The New Press
Hardcover · 240 Pages
$24.95 U.S.
ISBN 9781595584724
The New Press
Recommended for These Courses
Description
If only this book had been published in 2007. Then the hundreds of people interviewed by Lisa Dodson would have been able to pass along an important piece of advice: What's good for business is not necessarily good for America.
—Time magazine
Eloquent, rational analysis& Dodson writes clearly and unsentimentally. Important, encouraging reporting.
—Kirkus Reviews
Here is the documentary tradition at its very best an alertly knowing inquirer and observer learns from a nation's vulnerable and needy citizens how they keep striving to persist, make do, no matter the difficulties in their way (social, economic, political, and yes, alas, those grounded in senseless and callous bureaucratic rules, regulations). Here, too, is human resiliency, ingenuity put on record for us to consider, by a resourceful, knowing, and large-hearted teacher and writer.
— Robert Coles, Professor Emeritus Harvard University and Pulitzer Prize-winning author of the Children in Crisis series
This beautiful and poignant book uses the voices of ordinary Americans to trace a deep cultural divide between those who feel moral obligations to others and those who don't. It goes beyond an account of the tender mercies people often provide one another to show how mercy itself can subvert dominant economic logic. It quietly urges us all toward a more profound understanding of our need for a stronger culture of resistance.
— Nancy Folbre, Professor of Economics, University of Massachusetts, Amherst and author of The Invisible Heart
—Time magazine
Eloquent, rational analysis& Dodson writes clearly and unsentimentally. Important, encouraging reporting.
—Kirkus Reviews
Here is the documentary tradition at its very best an alertly knowing inquirer and observer learns from a nation's vulnerable and needy citizens how they keep striving to persist, make do, no matter the difficulties in their way (social, economic, political, and yes, alas, those grounded in senseless and callous bureaucratic rules, regulations). Here, too, is human resiliency, ingenuity put on record for us to consider, by a resourceful, knowing, and large-hearted teacher and writer.
— Robert Coles, Professor Emeritus Harvard University and Pulitzer Prize-winning author of the Children in Crisis series
This beautiful and poignant book uses the voices of ordinary Americans to trace a deep cultural divide between those who feel moral obligations to others and those who don't. It goes beyond an account of the tender mercies people often provide one another to show how mercy itself can subvert dominant economic logic. It quietly urges us all toward a more profound understanding of our need for a stronger culture of resistance.
— Nancy Folbre, Professor of Economics, University of Massachusetts, Amherst and author of The Invisible Heart
