"Bindas’s provocative and imaginative interpretation of a crucial moment in the development of contemporary America is both thoughtful and thought provoking, opening new avenues of inquiry for future historians."—Journal of Southern History
"A thoughtful, wonderfully well-researched, and cogently written study. Major programs, such as the Works Progress Administration and the Civilian Conservation Corps, are a prominent part of the story, as are concerns often given less attention, such as women’s rights and music and the arts. Highly recommended."—Choice
"In Modernity and the Great Depression: The Transformation of American Society, 1930–1941, Kenneth J. Bindas beautifully illustrates how the main tenants of modernity became part of Americans’ everyday lives. While many studies describe the transition in American society from traditional to modern, few describe in detail how that transition took place in the lives of average Americans. In clear, insightful and engaging prose, Bindas’ imaginative combination of New Deal programs, World’s Fairs, interior decorating, and music illustrate the multitude of ways that modernism worked into Americans’ lives and provided meaning during the Great Depression. No other study combines such diverse topics to create a unifying understanding of how Americans responded to the tumultuous 1930s."—Charles J. Shindo, author of 1927 and the Rise of Modern America
“A new and persuasive interpretation of American modernism in the 1930s, grounding the modernist movement not in high culture but in everyday life. Bindas focuses on the New Deal, religion, world’s fairs, interior decoration, and popular music. A book every student of the Great Depression should read.”— Richard Pells, author of War Babies:The Generation That Changed America
“In this vibrant, well-researched, and wide-ranging account of New Deal programs and cultural developments, Bindas illuminates modernity’s role in restoring contemporaries’ faith in tomorrow. His work raises provocative questions: Why have we lost faith in the power of order, planning, and reason to create a better world? Bindas’s intervention calls us to reconsider both modernity’s possibilities and its limitations.”— Sharon Ann Musher, Democratic Art: The New Deal’s Influence on American Culture
“Bindas convincingly recasts the Great Depression and New Deal as the era when ordinary Americans bought into the hopes and ideals of modernism. In wide-ranging thematic chapters, his provocative, engaging narrative spans the histories of religion, music, material culture, and politics to demonstrate Depression-era Americans’ singular preoccupation with the promises of modernity for building a better world.”— Alison Collis Greene, author of No Depression in Heaven: The Great Depression, the New Deal, and the Transformation of Religion in the Delta