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Hungry Oklahoma - by Robert Lee Maril (Hardcover)
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Highlights
- In Oklahoma, one out of every six residents is poor.
- Author(s): Robert Lee Maril
- 256 Pages
- Social Science, Poverty & Homelessness
Description
About the Book
Hungry Oklahoma ultimately suggests that persistent and pervasive poverty can be eliminated. Its moving accounts of real Oklahomans and their experiences make it a clarion call for not only those interested in policy issues but all Oklahomans who want a better today and tomorrow for those who call the state home.Book Synopsis
In Oklahoma, one out of every six residents is poor. One in five children lives in poverty and faces food insecurity. In Hungry Oklahoma, native son and sociologist Robert Lee Maril follows in the tradition of the national bestsellers Nickel and Dimed and Evicted to illuminate the lived experience of poverty and food insecurity in communities across the state.
Maril's account is immediately personal. He begins with "guests," as shoppers are called by volunteers, waiting in line in the sweltering heat one summer for "Thy Will Be Done," a food pantry, to open. Unable to afford air conditioning, some guests don't buy foods that would spoil on the counter. One woman, Norma, carefully places only canned vegetables in her cart. When she returns to her twenty-year-old pickup, in the truck bed are lawn chairs, blankets, and pans--everything she owns. "The landlord told us this morning we was homeless," Norma says. "I'm not thinking straight." Drawing on interviews and participant-observation data from his volunteer work at a food pantry, as well as census and sociological data, Maril documents in rich ethnographic detail the status of poverty and low-wage workers in the state today and within historical context. He explores how institutions--such as faith-based organizations, government, and food pantries--structure and shape experiences of poverty. While Maril celebrates the nonprofit and faith-based efforts that make a difference, this book also is critical of conditions and stereotypes that have entrenched poverty in the state. Hungry Oklahoma ultimately suggests that persistent and pervasive poverty can be eliminated. Its moving accounts of real Oklahomans and their experiences make it a clarion call for not only those interested in policy issues but all Oklahomans who want a better today and tomorrow for those who call the state home.Review Quotes
"Once again, Robert Lee Maril brings us into a world whose workings can seem invisible. A gifted ethnographer, his latest work offers a close and telling portrait of hunger and poverty. Through the lens of a single food pantry, Hungry Oklahoma presciently traces connections between the lives of those served by this crucial institution and the broader economic, political, and social systems that shape patterns of vulnerability and food insecurity. General readers, students, policymakers alike have much to gain from this rich and incisive exploration of the roots, consequences experience of precarity in a contemporary American community."--David Cunningham, Washington University in St. Louis, author of Klansville, U.S.A.: The Rise and Fall of the Civil Rights-Era Ku Klux Klan
"Using data from participant observation, Maril provides a richly detailed view of poverty from the perspectives of people who live with it daily. Although Oklahoma has a long history of poverty, Maril sees hope for the future. The challenge is getting people and policy working together at all levels."--Gene F. Summers, Former President, Rural Sociological Society.