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"This is an excellent over-all summary of various types of American opposition to World War I and the public response to that opposition in the form of hysteria, intolerance, and even violence. . . . [A] well done over-all account. . . ."-Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science
Fite has drawn together the many threads that make up commercial agricultural development in the eleven states of the old Confederacy, to explain why agricultural change was so slow in the South, and then to show how the agents of change worked after 1933 to destroy the old and produce a new agriculture.
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