We welcome your participation in the Rust Belt Literature group.

This group will host discussions of all types of literary responses to living in the Rust Belt, defined here as industrial communities in the United States. Those ho have been affected by the rust belt go beyond simply those who have grown up these. In a class-based society, people who have never lived anywhere near the rust belt may hold media-inspired attitudes about the Rust Belt and those who live there. We offer fresh exposure those not from the Rust belt, fresh air and news to those from the Rust Belt.

We may overlap at times with eco-literature, ethnic and race studies, labor fiction, and regional literature.

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Story in NW Times of Children of Steel unity in diversity lit. project

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    Gloria Lee McMillan
    Participant
    @gloriamla

    Hello, and happy new year all!

    Our writers have diverse roots. For instance, one such industrial community,  East Chicago, Indiana (host to Arcelor-Mittal’s current flagship and largest US full process steel mill) was listed on censuses in the 1940s and 1960s as having 82 nationalities.  As times have changed people have moved to suburbs surrounding but our diverse roots remain. Our schools were integrated. We need to celebrate our stories to bring us together.  Our writers’ families write or have written in English and other languages, such as Spanish, Polish, Greek, Czech, Slovak, Serbian, Croatian and others.  This collection is in English.  No one knew what our true strengths were outside of our steel mill towns.  We were modeling intercultural co-existence.

    We are fortunate to have reporters like Joseph Pete at the Northwest (Indiana) Times who recently interviewed me about our short story project Children of Steel.  I hope that this story will add interest and participation.  Our mission is to provide a window on the lives of those who grew up in steel mill towns that goes beyond miscommunication and stereotypes.  Other regions such as the south  in the US have suffered from this kind of problem.  Having fiction helped to change stereotypical views of the south.  We hope to create stories that will be suitable to be included in First Year College composition literary readers as well as other venues.

    Sincerely,
    Gloria McMillan
    Lecturer
    Dept. of English
    University of Arizona

     

     

     

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