AUDIOBOOK
Duration
7h 45m
Year
2025
Language
English

About

In 1980, Christine J. Walleys world was turned upside down when the steel mill in Southeast Chicago where her father worked abruptly closed. In the ensuing years, ninety thousand other area residents would also lose their jobs in the millsjust one example of the vast scale of deindustrialization occurring across the United States. The disruption of this event propelled Walley into a career as a cultural anthropologist, and now, inExit Zero, she brings her anthropological perspective home, examining the fate of her family and that of blue-collar America at large.Interweaving personal narratives and family photos with a nuanced assessment of the social impacts of deindustrialization,Exit Zerois one part memoir and one part ethnography providing a much-needed female and familial perspective on cultures of labor and their decline. Through vivid accounts of her familys struggles and her own upward mobility, Walley reveals the social landscapes of Americas industrial fallout, navigating complex tensions among class, labor, economy, and environment. Unsatisfied with the notion that her familys turmoil was inevitable in the ever-forward progress of the United States, she provides a fresh and important counternarrative that gives a new voice to the many Americans whose distress resulting from deindustrialization has too often been ignored.

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