Reviews
A wonderful epilogue to Temple's career... and an enlightening examination of the curly topped moppet's impact on Hollywood, the economy and the mood of a troubled nation., In a time of widespread suffering and frequent despair, this little girl touched the hearts of millions of people in our own land and others... John F. Kasson shows how her films provided therapy as well as entertainment., John Kasson delights the reader with his lively account of feel-good films starring the adorable curly-headed moppet who, with radiant smile and winsome guile, lit up the dark nights of the 1930s. A brilliant analyst, Kasson lays bare coruscatingly, too, how exploited child actors serve as 'canaries in the mine shaft of modern consumer culture.', [A] look back to a moment in American society when...the movies mattered and when one magnetic star could help change people's minds and hearts., John F. Kasson skillfully uses Shirley Temple as a prism to cast light on a vast range of subjects: The rise of FDR, optimism as Depression-era propaganda, the double existence of African-American stars, innocence as a consumer commodity, the fickleness of star adoration and the dangers of the mob, the meaning of childhood in a changing culture, and Hollywood's exploitation of its human profit centers, no matter how small. Connecting them all is Temple herself, serene, self-composed, and indestructible--the one movie star who wasn't putting on an act., [Kasson's] insightful new book explores the politics of the time, racial attitudes, movie-going habits and the breadth and depth of Shirley Temple's appeal., The Little Girl Who Fought the Great Depression is an illuminating and highly entertaining look at the life and career of the greatest young movie star of her era. John Kasson perceptively reveals how Shirley Temple brought hope and joy to a diverse array of people throughout the world while simultaneously transforming the nature of celebrity, consumption, and childhood culture in 1930s America., Sparkling, beautifully written, nearly impossible to put down. John Kasson moves behind the seemingly effortless smile of Shirley Temple to uncover the child labor it required, and explores the complex emotional work performed by that smile for Americans struggling to survive the Great Depression. A compelling and creative new cultural history of the 1930s., Examines the impact of the child star not only on Hollywood, but on politics as well... Elucidating... a must-read., Carefully argued and gracefully written. Not since the pioneering essays of Warren Susman has any historian so brilliantly illuminated the emotional life of Americans in the 1930s. The Great Depression--not to mention Shirley Temple and Franklin Roosevelt--will never look the same.