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Carnival in the Countryside : The History of the Iowa State Fair / by Chris Rasmussen.
- Format:
- Book
- Author/Creator:
- Rasmussen, Chris (Chris Allen)
- Series:
- Iowa and the Midwest Experience
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Country life--Iowa--History.
- Country life.
- Agricultural exhibitions--Iowa--History.
- Agricultural exhibitions.
- Iowa--Rural conditions.
- Iowa.
- Iowa--Social life and customs.
- Iowa State Fair--History.
- Iowa State Fair.
- Genre:
- Electronic books.
- Physical Description:
- 1 online resource (228 p.)
- Place of Publication:
- Iowa City : University of Iowa Press, [2015]
- Language Note:
- English
- Summary:
- More than a century and a half after its founding, the Iowa State Fair is the state's central institution, event, and symbol. New Jersey has the Shore; Kentucky has the Derby; Iowa has the Fair. The humble Iowa State Fairground ranks alongside the Great Pyramids at Giza and the Taj Mahal in the best-selling travel guide 1, 000 Places to See Before You Die. During its annual run each August, the fair attracts hundreds of thousands of visitors who make the pilgrimage to the fairground to see the iconic butter cow, to ride the Old Mill, to walk through the livestock barns, and to people-watch. At the same time that they enjoy fried candy bars and roller coasters, Iowans also compete to raise the best corn and zucchinis, to make the best jams and jellies, to rear the finest sheep and goats, the largest cattle and hogs, and the handsomest horses.This tension between entertainment and agriculture goes back all the way to the fair's founding in the mid-1800s, as historian Chris Rasmussen shows in this thought-provoking history. The fair's founders had lofty aims: they sought to improve agriculture and foster a distinctively democratic American civilization. But from the start these noble intentions jostled up against people's desire to have fun and make money, honestly or otherwise-not least because the fair had to pay for itself. In their effort to uplift rural life without going broke, the organizers of the Iowa State Fair debated the respectability of horse racing and gambling and struggled to find qualified livestock judges. Worried about the economic forces undermining rural families, they ran competitions to select the best babies and the "ideal" rural girl and boy while luring spectators with massive panoramas of earthquakes and fires, not to mention staged trainwrecks. In short, the Iowa State Fair has as much to tell us about human nature and American history as it does about growing corn.
- Contents:
- The founders of civilization : culture and agriculture in Iowa
- Carnival in the countryside : sideshows and showmen
- A finer rural civilization : the farm family and the "drift to the cities"
- A bumper crop of entertainment : fair men, midways and spectacles
- Agricultural lag : the fair in fiction, in film, and on canvas
- Conclusion: The fair and Iowa's history.
- Notes:
- Description based upon print version of record.
- Includes bibliographical references and index.
- Description based on print version record.
- ISBN:
- 9781609383589
- 1609383583
- OCLC:
- 911665824
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