Heartland
Au cœur de la pauvreté dans le pays le plus riche du monde
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- £13.99
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- £13.99
Publisher Description
Cinquième génération d’agriculteurs des grandes plaines du Kansas côté paternel, et énième génération de mères-adolescentes côté maternel, la journaliste Sarah Smarsh fait le récit de son enfance passée, pendant les années 1980 et 1990, dans une ferme à des dizaines de kilomètres de la ville la plus proche, Wichita. Par la description méticuleuse de sa vie quotidienne, les portraits qu’elle brosse des membres de sa famille et la manière dont elle envisage plus généralement la situation de son pays, l’auteur livre un regard d’une lucidité rare sur la vie des travailleurs pauvres de cette Amérique, ce cœur du pays fait de plaines infinies que les Américains appellent Heartland.
Avec clarté, précision, compassion, Sarah Smarsh nous emmène au plus près de la classe ouvrière pauvre, une classe constituée d’hommes et de femmes que l’Amérique a appris à considérer comme valant moins parce que gagnant moins, une classe à laquelle son pays a inculqué la honte d’elle-même.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
"Class is an illusion with real consequences," Smarsh writes in this candid and courageous memoir of growing up in a family of working-class farmers in Kansas during the 1980s and '90s. A writing professor and journalist whose work has appeared in the Guardian and the New Yorker, Smarsh tells her story to her inner child, whose "unborn spirit" allows Smarsh to break the cycle of poverty that constrained her family for generations. Smarsh was born to a teenage mother, and the women in her family were all young mothers who hardened and aged early from the work it took to survive the day-to-day. Smarsh writes with love and care about these women and the men who married them, including her father and Grandpa Arnie, but she also lays bare their hardships (for many poor women, "there is a violence to merely existing: the pregnancies without health care, the babies that can't be had, the repetitive physical jobs") and the shame of being poor ("to experience economic poverty... is to live with constant reminders of what you don't have"). It is through education that Smarsh is able to avoid their fate; but while hers is a happy ending, she is still haunted by the fact that being poor is associated with being bad. Smarsh's raw and intimate narrative exposes a country of economic inequality that "has failed its children."