Erskine Caldwell

Trouble in July

Numéro d'article 10217407

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In Trouble in July, Erskine Caldwell presents a harrowing depiction of the American South during the Great Depression, where a false accusation of rape against an innocent Black man, Sonny Clark, triggers a relentless lynch mob. The narrative focuses on the systemic moral decay of Julie County, embodied by Sheriff Jeff McCurtain, who intentionally evades his duty by going on a fishing trip to avoid the political fallout of interfering with the mob's "justice." Caldwell utilizes a style of grotesque realism to expose how racial violence was not merely the act of a few extremists, but a calculated byproduct of political cowardice, social complicity, and a legal system designed to protect white supremacy at any cost. By stripping away any sense of romanticism or heroic intervention, the novel serves as a bleak indictment of a society where poverty and prejudice turn ordinary citizens into passive observers or active participants in a tragic miscarriage of justice.

État

D'occasion - Mauvais

Langue

Anglais

Type d'articles

Livre - Couverture souple

Année

1947

Éditeur

Penguin Books (New York)

Nombre de pages

139 pages

Série

Penguin (567)

Discolouration. Cover damaged.