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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2009
A FEW YEARS AGO, hardly an important or good book about the human problems of the land was appearing. Now, to judge by the books and articles, we see that a new and very intelligent interest has been awakened. Publications are devoted to homestead and subsistence projects, such as Ralph Borsodi's and Monsignor Ligutti's, to the great and lasting agrarianism of the South, to an outright decentralization, to cooperatives as affecting rural and suburban life, and especially to the effective and democratic cooperatives of Nova Scotia.
1 Smart, Charles Allen: R.F.D. (New York, 1938)Google Scholar. Phudd Hill (New York, 1938)Google Scholar, is even more unreal and devitalized, and is exceptionally sentimental.
2 Tetlow, Henry, We Farm for a Hobby and Make It Pay (New York, 1938)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
3 Fritts, Frank and Gwinn, R. W., Fifth Avenue to Farm. A Biological Approach to the Problem of the Survival of Our Civilization (New York, 1938)Google Scholar.
4 Borsodi, Ralph, Flight from the City (3rd printing, New York, 1933)Google Scholar.
5 Borsodi, Ralph, Prosperity and Security. A Study in Realistic Economics (New York, 1938)Google Scholar.
6 1928–29.
7 Prosperity and Security, pp. 116, 170, 177, 178, 181.
8 See Prosperity and Security, pp. 182, 171.
9 The Bulletins on “specific problems in economics and home economics” can be got from the School of Living, Suffern, N. Y.; the first ten are ready, at a total price of $2.00, or twenty-five cents apiece, and at lower rates in lots; also a rather complete bibliography of the Borsodi experiments can be had free from the same address.
10 Published by the Extension Department of St. Francis Xavier University. Antigonish, Nova Scotia, twice a month; the rate is $1.00 a year in Canada, and $1.25 outside of Canada. It contains editorials, news and direction on co-operation.
11 Fowler, B. B., The Lord Helps Those. How the People of Nova Scotia are Solving their Problems through Co-operation (New York, 1938)Google Scholar.
12 Lord, Russell, Behold Our Land (Boston, 1938)Google Scholar.
13 Cauley, Troy, Agrarianism. A Program for Farmers (Chapel Hill, 1935)Google Scholar.
14 Schmiedeler, Edgar, A Better Rural Life (New York, 1938)Google Scholar.
15 Southerners, Twelve, I'll Take My Stand. The South and the Agrarian Tradition (New York, 1938). We mention especially the chapters by John Ransom, Donald Davidson, and John WadeGoogle Scholar.
16 Davidson, Donald, The Attack on Leviathan. Regionalism and Nationalism in the United States (Chapel Hill, 1938)Google Scholar. Mr. Davidson's motto is from Blake: “One law for the lion and ox is oppression.”
17 Ibid., pp. 64, 9–11, 12, 28, 41–2, 112–117.
18 Pp. 31–38.
19 Chapter 12.
20 Agar, Herbert, Land of the Free (Boston, 1935)Google Scholar, and Pursuit of Happiness; the Story of American Democracy (Boston, 1938). Cf. also Who Owns America? A New Declaration of Independence (ed. by Agar, and Tate, Google Scholar; Boston, 1936).
21 Agar, Herbert, Pursuit of Happiness, pp. 6–30Google Scholar; 178–200.
22 O. E. Baker, Ralph Borsodi and M. L. Wilson, Agriculture in Modern Life; to be published by Harper and Brothers.
23 Wallace, Henry, New Frontiers (New York, 1934)Google Scholar.
24 Wilson, M. L., Democracy Has Roots (New York, 1939)Google Scholar.
25 Sample copies will be sent by Free America, 112 E. 19th St., New York.
26 Samples will be sent by the Editor, 240 Summit Ave., St. Paul, Minn.