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Returning to his native Chicago after World War II, Nelson Algren found a city transformed. The flourishing industry, culture, and literature that had placed prewar Chicago at center stage in American life were entering a time of crisis. The middle class and economic opportunity were leaving the inner city, and Black Southerners arriving in Chicago found themselves increasingly estranged from the nation's economic and cultural resources. For Algren, Chicago was becoming 'an October sort of city even in the spring', and as Carlo Rotella demonstrates, this metaphorical landscape of fall led Algren and others to forge a literary form that traced the American city's transformation. Narratives of decline, like the complementary narratives of black migration and inner-city life written by Claude Brown and Gwendolyn Brooks, became building blocks of the postindustrial urban literature. "October Cities" examines these narratives as they played out in Chicago, Philadelphia, and Manhattan. Through the work of Algren, Brown, Brooks, and other urban writers, Rotella explores the relationship of this new literature to the cities it draws upon for inspiration.The stories told are of neighborhoods and families molded by dramatic urban transformation on a grand scale with vast movements of capital and people, racial succession, and an intensely changing urban landscape.
Carlo Rotella is Assistant Professor of English and American Studies at Lafayette College.
List of Illustrations Acknowledgments Introduction: The City of Feeling and the City of Fact PART ONE: The Decline and Fall of the Old Neighborhood1 Exposition: The Story of Decline 2 The Old Neighborhood: Industrial Chicago and Its Literatures 3 Closing Time: The Man with the Golden Arm 4 After the End: The Story of Decline as Act One PART TWO: The Neighborhood Novel and the Transformation of the Inner City5 Exposition: South Street and the Neighborhood Novel 6 Urban Village and Black Metropolis: John Fury and South Street 7 The Literature of Postindustrial South Street Part Three The City of Feeling in Crisis8 Exposition: That Separate World 9 Violence, the Second Ghetto, and the Logic of Urban Crisis 10 Checkpoint Frederick Douglass: Warren Miller and the Boundaries of the Ghetto 11 The Box of Groceries and the Omnibus Tour: Manchild in the Promised Land 12 The War of Position Conclusion: Notes from a Cultural Sea Change Notes Index