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PUBLICATIONS
Inside
Illinois
Vol.
23, No. 11, Dec. 4, 2003

book
corner
Book tells how urbanization is eroding
small-town communities
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"Newcomers
to Old Towns: Suburbanization of the Heartland,"
by Sonya Salamon (University of Chicago Press/2003)
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Suburbanization
of small towns is reversing the exodus of the best and brightest that
led sociologist E.A. Ross to declare in 1915 that Midwestern towns “remind
one of fished-out ponds populated chiefly by bullheads and suckers.”
In the book “Newcomers
to Old Towns: Suburbanization of the Heartland” (University of
Chicago Press), Sonya Salamon explores migration to small-town America
and the impact that newcomers have on social relationships, public spaces
and community resources.
Salamon, professor
of community studies in the department of human and community development,
conducted richly detailed ethnographic studies of six small towns in
Central Illinois over a decade. Salamon’s study included a town
with upscale subdivisions that lured wealthy professionals as well as
towns whose agribusinesses drew working-class Mexican immigrants and
one town that marketed itself to lower-middle-class home buyers to combat
a housing surplus caused by the closing of a military base.
Although the demise of the small town has been predicted for decades,
during the 1990s the population of rural America actually increased
by more than 3 million people. Salamon contends that small towns hold
a strong allure for Americans.
“This enduring national vision of arcadia – a simpler way
of life amidst a rustic landscape – is reweaving our rural social
fabric,” Salamon said.
Salamon found that regardless of the relative wealth or ethnicity of
the newcomers if they differed in class from oldtimers their effect
on a town was the same: suburbanization that eroded the close-knit small
town community with especially severe consequences for small- town youth.
“A sense of
community derives from how a town differs rather than is the same as
other places,” Salamon said. “The suburbanization challenge
is for towns to resist homogenization of the vital aspects of community
life they cherish most.”
To successfully combat this homogenization, Salamon argues, newcomers
must work with oldtimers to sustain the vital aspects of community life
that first drew them to small towns.
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