Full Description
Stretching westward from deep in the Appalachian Mountains to the waters of the Mississippi River that drain the center of the United States lies Kentucky, the Land of Tomorrow. Kentucky was the nation's first extension of itself into the interior of the vast North American continent. As such, Kentucky became the restless heart of the growing, maturing United States. To know Kentucky, its land, people, its civilization, its distinctive character and personality, takes time. Often, such things are not as they first seem. This is so for it is the state's numerous ironies and paradoxes that give the Commonwealth's way of life much of its meaning, power, vitality, wonder, and its great capacity to endure. The greatest of these ironies and paradoxes is that of the larger American civilization—the tension and ever shifting balance between the strong desire for expansive individual liberty and the need for community. This is the story of Kentucky, the nation's restless heart, and of its people's ongoing search for home and freedom, as seen through multiple prisms of irony and paradox.
Contents
Part 1 Preface Chapter 2 Introduction Chapter 3 Kentucky in the Days before the American Civil War Chapter 4 Civil War and Post-War Adjustment: Kentucky 1860-1900 Chapter 5 The Progressive Era in Kentucky 1900-1920 Chapter 6 Post-War Readjustment Again and War Again 1920-1945 Chapter 7 Kentucky after the Second World War Chapter 8 The River of Life Flows On Chapter 9 Paradoxes Enough: Liberty and Community in Kentucky Part 10 Endnotes Part 11 Bibliography Part 12 Index