From The Living New Deal <[email protected]>
Subject The Fireside: This Land Was Made for You and Me
Date February 6, 2021 1:59 AM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
View this email in your browser ([link removed])

FEBRUARY 2021


** THIS LAND WAS MADE FOR YOU AND ME
------------------------------------------------------------
Like thousands of other Dust Bowl refugees, Woody Guthrie migrated to California. He scraped by, busking for spare change, washing dishes, sweeping floors. In 1937, he got a job at a small radio station in LA. As his popularity grew, Woody mimeographed copies of his songs to mail to fans. In his songbook, “Ten Songs for Two Bits," ([link removed]) Woody wrote:

“In these ten songs you will hear a lot of music of a lot of races. Songs of every color. Every people loves and copies the songs and the music, the ideas, the customs, of all the other races. Songs like these soak into every wall, hall, factory, every hull of every ship, every hammer coming down on every anvil, every seed falling down into every row, every hand moving with a dust rag, a wheel, a lever, a dial, a handle, a button pushed…I have never heard a nation of people sing an editorial out of a newspaper. A man sings about the little things that help him or hurt his people and he sings of what has got to be done to fix this world like it ought to be.”

Woody would go on to write a thousand such songs, including “This Land Is Your Land,” a protest song in response to Irving Berlin’s patriotic hymn, "God Bless America,” which Woody felt glossed over the lop-sided distribution of wealth in America .“This Land is Your Land” was performed at the presidential inauguration last month—an appeal for unity. But Woody’s song reminds us that we have much work to do "to fix this world like it ought to be."
Watch:“This Land Is Your Land” montage from the film “Woody Guthrie: Hard Travelin” ([link removed]) (3 min)
Watch: Sharon Jones and the Dapp Kings:This Land Is Your Land ([link removed]) (4 min)


**
Powerful Music. Woody and the Bonneville Power Administration ([link removed])
------------------------------------------------------------


** by Jonathan Shipley
------------------------------------------------------------
Before he became the legendary folk singer, Woodrow Wilson Guthrie was an itinerant left-wing songwriter looking for work. In 1937, he was hired by the BPA. They couldn’t get him on the (permanent) payroll, so they hired him for 30 days. Guthrie earned a total of $266.66, which worked out to about ten dollars a song. READ MORE ([link removed])
"Here’s the Deal,” Joe Biden. We Need a Big Jobs Program Now. ([link removed])
By June Hopkins and David Riemer
The New Deal’s history holds valuable lessons for the new Administration: “People don’t eat in the long run,” Harry Hopkins said, “they eat every day.” The most powerful antidote to poverty is immediate employment and decent wages.READ MORE ([link removed])
HAPPENINGS
A Living New Deal Webinar
Health of a Nation: Past Inspirations, Recent Lessons and Equitable Planning for the Future
Monday, February 8, 2021, 8pm EST

Among its many achievements, the New Deal devoted significant resources to improving public health. To explore this forgotten history and to address the public health challenges we face today, join the webinar. FREE. Learn more and register ([link removed]) .
Webinar by Annie Rothstein Segan
Photography of Arthur Rothstein in New Jersey
Saturday, Feb 20, 2021, 2pm EST

While working for the FSA, Rothstein ([link removed]) captured iconic images of the Dust Bowl and Great Depression. Lesser known are his photos documenting workers on the cranberry bogs and farms of Burlington County, NJ. These works now serve to help us learn about what life on the farm was like in the late 1930s. FREE. Click here to register. ([link removed])
Webinar
Fire, Fire Mapping and Fire Breaks
The David Rumsey Map Center at Stanford University
Friday, February 26,2021, 2:30pm PST

Authors Stephen Pyne and Gray Brechin will discuss America’s fire history and policy including the Ponderosa Way, an 800-mile-long fire break built by the Civilian Conservation for containing wildfires. Learn more and register. ([link removed])
Read Brechin’s article "A Fire Break Runs Through It" ([link removed])
THE NEW DEAL IN THE NEWS


** Some links may limit access for nonsubscribers. Please support local journalism, if you can.
------------------------------------------------------------
Photos show how Biden replaced Trump’s Oval Office decorations with symbols of American icons ([link removed])
Gone is the portrait of populist President Andrew Jackson that Trump so admired, replaced by a grand portrait of President Franklin Delano Roosevelt, the man who once guided the country out of troubled times — a task that President Biden now faces.
by Erin Snodgrass
Insider, January 21, 2021

When Biden Becomes…Rooseveltian ([link removed])
Using a crisis to reduce child poverty and make America more truly a land of opportunity.
“Mr. President, if your program succeeds, you’ll be the greatest president in American history,” the visitor told FDR. “If it fails, you will be the worst one.” “If it fails,” Roosevelt responded, “I’ll be the last one.”
By Nicholas Kristof
The New York Times, January 16, 2021

The Arts Are in Crises: Here’s How Biden Can Help. ([link removed])
A critic offers an ambitious plan.
By Jason Farago
The New York Times, January 13, 2021

The Next New Deal Must be for Black Americans, too. ([link removed])
Democratic leaders including President-elect Joe Biden often harken back to the New Deal. But for Black Americans, the New Deal left an ambivalent legacy.
By Willow Lung-Amam
Bloomberg, January 18, 2021

The Case for a New WPA ([link removed])
When the government pays for people to work, they get out of poverty, a new study finds. The social worker Harry Hopkins was convinced of one thing during the Great Depression: It did not benefit a man to sit around waiting for work. “Give a man a dole,” he famously said at the time, “and you save his body and destroy his spirit.”
By Alana Semuels
The Atlantic, April 14, 2016
“Let us never forget that government is ourselves and not an alien power over us. The ultimate rulers of our democracy are not a President and senators and congressmen and government officials, but the voters of this country.”
— Franklin D. Roosevelt

In Case You Missed It
Social movements historically have used posters to spread the word, build solidarity and demand change. During the New Deal, the WPA produced posters to promote public health, tourism, education, the arts and more. In the digital age, activists are harnessing the power of the poster to demand a Green New Deal.


Watch: Art and Activism-Posters for Social Change ([link removed]) (1 hour)
A Living New Deal Webinar with Lincoln Cushing, Ennis Carter and Max Slavkin

YOUR DONATIONS ([link removed]) KEEP THE NEW DEAL SPIRIT ALIVE.
The Living New Deal thanks you for your generous support!
DONATE ([link removed])
JOIN US ([link removed])
FORWARD ([link removed])
[link removed]
[link removed]
[link removed]
[link removed]
mailto:[email protected]

============================================================
You are receiving this email because you are a friend of THE LIVING NEW DEAL.

Editor, ** Susan Ives (mailto:[email protected])

Production: ** Sheera Bleckman ([link removed])
, ** Lisa Thompson ([link removed])

Our mailing address is:
The Living New Deal
Department of Geography
University of California
Berkeley, CA 94720

** [email protected] (mailto:[email protected])

** livingnewdeal.org ([link removed])

If you no longer wish to receive these emails, ** click here ([link removed])
to unsubscribe.

Copyright © 2021 LIVING NEW DEAL, All rights reserved.
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis