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21. African American Review: Radical Revisions: Rereading 1930s Culture. - Book Revi
or came to maturity during the 1930s, relatively few studies exist whichattempt to Alan Wald s The 1930s Left in us Literature Reconsidered is a
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ASEE Prism Academe African American Review ... View all titles in this topic Hot New Articles by Topic Automotive Sports Top Articles Ever by Topic Automotive Sports Radical Revisions: Rereading 1930s Culture. - book reviews African American Review Fall, 1997 by James Smethurst
Save a personal copy of this article and quickly find it again with Furl.net. It's free! Save it. Reviewed by James Smethurst Harvard University Continue article Advertisement
Despite these quibbles, Radical Revisions is a welcome addition to the increasing number of studies of 1930s literary radicalism. It opens up a wide range of discussions that have not occurred, or are only beginning to occur, and that are long overdue. For African Americanists, these discussions are crucial for understanding the formation of the poetics of so many of those writers recognized as canonical within the field and for extending and revising the powerful arguments made by Harold Cruse regarding the centrality of the 1930s (and 1940s) to the development of African American literary and intellectual traditions in this century.
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22. 1930s Setting For To Kill A Mockingbird
Television, radio, World’s Fair (1933); us Nobel Prize winners; Glenn Curtiss,Sigmund Freud, EDUCATION IN THE 1930s. The Center for Dewey studies
http://www.mcps.k12.md.us/schools/wjhs/mediactr/englishpathfinder/1930_tkm/
WJHS Media Center Pathfinder for English 9
1930s Research Paper: Introduction of
Setting in
To Kill A Mockingbird
Picture Source: Kingwood College Library: American Cultural History 1930-1939 Task Definition Information Seeking Strategies Location and Access ... Evaluation The www.big6.com
1. Task Definition
Objective
: To research an aspect of the 1930s in order gain an understanding of the
setting in terms of time and place of the novel, To Kill A Mockingbird. Requirements:
Works Cited Format

Steps:
  • Read the novel. Choose a topic from the novel relating to the 1930's. Apply the knowledge gained through research to the literature.
    Write the paper.
  • Possible topics: All topics relate to the United States in the 1930s. Suggested topics are listed, but more should be sought out.
    Women of the 1930s Economic Concerns of the 1930s Science/Technology/ Innovation during 1930s
    • Description/details about traditional "Southern Belles" Fashion, careers, family roles, taboos for women, the work place, wages Gertrude Stein, Mrs. Wallis Simpson, Margaret Mitchell, Jane Addams, Pearl S .Buck, Amelia Earhar

    23. David S. Wyman Institute For Holocaust Studies: Welcome
    in us newspapers in the 1930s and 1940s, click here. The David S. Wyman Institutefor Holocaust studies played a significant role in facilitating the
    http://www.wymaninstitute.org/
    September 26, 2005 JOIN US DONATE Prof. David S. Wyman
    Read more.

    About the

    Wyman Institute
    Wyman Institute's Third National Conference Called "a Huge Success
    from Start to Finish"
    An array of outstanding scholars, political figures, and cultural luminaries headlined the third national conference of the Wyman Institute, "America and the Holocaust: Politics, Art, History," held September 18 at the Fordham University School of Law in New York City.
    An enthusiastic audience of more than two hundred packed the McNally Amphitheater for the conference, which participants described as a huge success from start to finish.
    The day was filled with vigorous discussions and some remarkable revelations.
    Conference emcee Thane Rosenbaum, a Fordham professor, prominent legal scholar, and award-winning novelist, welcomed the attendees, as did Fordham's associate dean, Prof. Matthew Diller. The opening session, "La Guardia and the Holocaust," featured new research by Wyman Institute director Dr. Rafael Medoff revealing the little-known role played by New York City Mayor Fiorello La Guardia in lobbying the Roosevelt administration to rescue Jewish refugees from the Holocaust.
    The session was chaired by one of La Guardia's successors, former Mayor Ed Koch, who said President Roosevelt's unresponsiveness to appeals for the refugees was "unforgivable." Koch said, "I am sure FDR is in purgatory as punishment for turning his back on Holocaust victims." Also on the panel were LaGuardia biographer Prof. Thomas Kessner and Dr. Rochelle Saidel, who is editing the memoirs of La Guardia's sister Gemma.

    24. Social Studies Rubric
    SUBJECT MATTER RUBRIC Social studies. AMERICAN HISTORY Identify two problemsfor Americans in the 1930s and tell how the us government worked to solve
    http://www.accessexcellence.org/LC/TL/liu/nutrition/nutriss7.html
    SUBJECT MATTER RUBRIC: Social Studies
      AMERICAN HISTORY
    American History 1 Food production and distribution in the 1930s Level 2 Demonstrate an understanding of the causes and effects of the problems surrounding food production and distribution in the 1930s in the US. Level 3 = L2 + Focus on the problems in a particular geographic area Level 4 = L3 + Focus on one particular part of the food industry, such as cotton growing or farm machinery production American History 2 Government Involvement in problems in the 1930s Level 2 Identify two problems for Americans in the 1930s and tell how the U.S. government worked to solve these problems: specify the programs the government put in place, and describe the effects of these programs had on food production and distribution Level 3 = L2 + Evaluate at least 2 government programs. Describe their effectiveness in accomplishing their goals in the 1930s Level 4 = L3 + Follow the 2 government programs through to current time; evaluate for effectiveness American History 3 Effects of World War II on food and other industries Level 2 Show how World War II helped to change the farming industry Level 3 = L2 + Explain how changes in the labor force during W.W.II influenced the farming industry.

    25. American Culture In The 1930s
    The Rise of the Bakelite and Catalin Radio in the us during the 1930s by Louis B . The Classroom Electronic Courses in American studies from American
    http://www.let.uu.nl/ams/xroads/1930proj.htm
    American Culture in the 1930s
    1930s Internet Sources Essays Participants in this project
    Sources in the Netherlands
    ...
    Internet sources on the American 1930s
    A selection of links to Web Sites that offer research material, overviews, images, sources, or of course more links to other sites on American culture and society in the 1930s.
    Participants this project
    A course on America in the 1930s is taught simultaneously by the American Studies programs of the University of Wyoming at Laramie , and Odense University , and Utrecht . Students at these three sites communicate with each other though e-mail and the World Wide Web. Together they work on a collective hyper-text on Culture under the Depression. Meet the participants in Utrecht (now with bio's and portraits)! Course description American Culture in the 1930s at Utrecht, Spring 1997.
    Course description AMST 4500-01: AMERICA IN THE 1930s at Wyoming, Laramie, Spring 1997. Course description America in the 1930s at Odense, Fall 1996.
    Essays on Culture in the 1930s
    These essays were written by students in Laramie and Utrecht for this course.

    26. European Contributions To American Studies
    interest in the us, discuss some of the elements that make the 1930s and Under American New Historicism and British Cultural studies increasing
    http://www.let.uu.nl/nasa/eurocont.htm
    European Contributions to American Studies
    NASA members receive a 20% discount on issues of European Contributions to American Studies . For order information, see below Available titles:
    THE FUTURE OF AMERICAN MODERNISM
    Ethnic writing between the wars
    William Boelhower (ed.)
    This volume of essays on ethnic modernism in American literature marks another international sortie of European and American scholars into the currently mined field of discussion on literary historiography and the canon. The original forum was a workshop titled Ethnic Writing and the Changing Literary Canon which the editor monitored for the 1988 Berlin Conference of the European Association of American Studies. The general theme was `Looking Inward - Looking Outward: The United States from the 1930s through the 1940s'. 90-6256-917-x, Hfl. 69,50/$ 49.50/# 23.00
    European Contributions to American Studies 17
    LOOKING INWARD LOOKING OUTWARD
    From the 1930s through the 1940s
    Steve Ickringill (ed.)
    In this volume scholars from a range of discipline backgrounds, joined by their interest in the US, discuss some of the elements that make the 1930s and 1940s such an intriguing period to study. These years saw the US undergo its most sustained economic crisis and subsequently become involved in a war of unprecedented size and complexity. The country then emerged as the dominant world power, with all the strains this put on domestic American politics. In this context American creative artists looked inward at what it meant to be an American while responding to a range of impulses from other cultures. Although this is a very varied collection, there are certain concentrations of attention, notably on black writers and on the immigrant experience. The contributions in this volume were originally presented to the 1988 Berlin Conference of the European Association for American Studies

    27. Soviet Education In The 1930s Compared To  U.S. Education In 2001
    One of the greatest evils and misfortunes left to us by the old, Labor instructionin schools proved to be divorced from other studies,
    http://www.crossroad.to/articles2/SovietEd.htm
    Soviet Education under Lenin Models U.S. Education for the New millennium Based on quotations from the Russian book: " On Labour-Oriented Education and Instruction " by Nadezhda Krupskaya: English translation published in 1982 by Progress Publishers, Moscow, USSR Home Paradigm Shift Articles Victory Email this page This attempt to show the implementation of the Soviet-UNESCO human resource program is far from finished. Concerned parents around the world need to understand today's global management system which merges labor and "lifelong learning" with socialist ideology, psycho-social manipulation and high tech monitoring. Only then, can we take our stand, equip our children and prepare for the future. For background information, please read: Bush, Gorbachev, Shultz and Soviet Education Molding Human Resources for a Global Workforce Solidarity Versus Christianity Nadezhda Krupskaya: "Following the Eight All-Russian Congress of Soviets [1920], a Party conference was planned on public education.... instructions should be linked with practical work, with the problems of building socialism which country faced... that the range of knowledge which should be taught in the schools at each level should be determined in a new way."

    28. Edward D. Miller: Emergency Broadcasting And 1930s American Radio
    Miller helps us avoid these mistakes and should encourage us all to take another, —Martin Spinelli, Ph.D., Professor of Radio and Media studies,
    http://www.temple.edu/tempress/titles/1619_reg.html
    Radio, the nation, and the rise of the voice in broadcasting, in a clearly written, significant history of the birth of the first mass medium Buy this book! View Cart Check Out
    Emergency Broadcasting and 1930s American Radio
    Edward D. Miller
    cloth 1-56639-992-0 $59.50, Dec 02, Available
    paper 1-56639-993-9 $21.95, Dec 02, Available
    264 pp 5.5x8.25 "In an era dominated by television and increasingly focused on the Internet as the new kid on the media block, Miller offers a valuable history lesson by reminding us of the power once yielded by radio. The best inoculation against the hyperbolic claims of new media is to understand the commonalities as well as the unique features of the various media that have shaped public consciousness in the past century. In this still unfolding narrative, radio has often been overlooked or taken for granted. Miller helps us avoid these mistakes and should encourage us all to take another, closer listen to the voices in the ether."
    Larry Gross , Sol Worth Professor, The Annenberg School for Communication, University of Pennsylvania Emergency Broadcasting focuses on key moments in the history of early radio in order to come to an understanding of the role voice played in radio to describe national crises, a fictional invasion from outer space, and general entertainment. Taking the Hindenburg disaster

    29. 1930 S America Books And Articles - Research 1930 S America At
    Think Back on us A Contemporary Chronicle of the 1930 s YESTERDAYS STORIESRecent Titles in Contributions in American studies Business and Religion in
    http://www.questia.com/Index.jsp?CRID=1930s_america&OFFID=se2&KEY=1930s

    30. Project MUSE
    Copyright © 2000 The American studies Association. All rights reserved. The three books under review give us a new vision of the 1930s that is,
    http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/american_quarterly/v052/52.1schocket.html
    How Do I Get This Article? Athens Login
    Access Restricted
    This article is available through Project MUSE, an electronic journals collection made available to subscribing libraries NOTE: Please do NOT contact Project MUSE for a login and password. See How Do I Get This Article? for more information.
    Login: Password: Your browser must have cookies turned on Schocket, Eric "Revising the 1930s in the 1990s, Or the Work of Art in the Age of Diminished Expectations"
    American Quarterly - Volume 52, Number 1, March 2000, pp. 159-167
    The Johns Hopkins University Press

    Excerpt
    Each generation of scholars, it seems, must come to terms with the cultural legacy of the 1930s. A period that somehow seemed codified even before it was concluded, the decade has regularly been revisited by intellectuals who grapple with it in toto , pushing it to the Left or to the Right, or who, at key moments, rescue one select cultural figure from the political fray (William Faulkner in the 1940s, Tillie Olsen and Zora Neale Hurston in the 1970s, and Nathanael West, apparently, in the 1990s). And as with any historical endeavor, each generation returns to the scene (the scene of political possibility in this case) with its own set of ideological and aesthetic questions, its own intellectual [End Page 159] curiosities and needs, and its own definitions of a "usable past." This truism belies, however, a gulf that divides this newest group of scholars from their predecessors. Coming of age while the Watergate hearings played in the background, assuming the betrayal of both the Old

    31. Overview Of IFUSS :: INTERNATIONAL PROGRAMS :: The University Of Iowa
    writers of the 1930s, Gay life in New York City, the urban geography of Chicago, The International Forum for us studies is located on the beautiful
    http://www.uiowa.edu/~ifuss/overview.html
    Overview of IFUSS Co-Founders and Co-Directors:
    Dr. Jane C. Desmond
    Dr. Virginia R. Domnguez
    The study of U.S. culture takes place among scholars in many parts of the globe, but most scholars of U.S. culture living and working in the United States are unfamiliar with this work by their foreign colleagues. The Forum works to internationalize the practice of "American Studies" in the U.S. by placing foreign and domestic scholars in dialogue. Simultaneously, it fosters scholarly relations across multiple national boundaries and regions outside the United States by bringing scholars from all parts of the globe together for shared research residencies and conferences. It is our belief that these multiple angles of vision, forged in the academic traditions and national contexts of each participant's scholarly community, will yield a more complex understanding of the many facets of U.S. culture than is otherwise possible. RESEARCH RESIDENCIES The appointment of Fellows for Research Residencies lies at the heart of the Forum's activities. Through a combination of open global competitions and direct invitations, the Forum hosts exceptional scholars from outside the U.S. for residencies lasting from two weeks to three months. While in residence, Fellows pursue their own research with access to excellent library facilities. They also lead colloquia, participate in faculty seminars and sometimes offer a course in their specialty area. With applicants from more than 60 countries, the range of scholarship represented is truly diverse in terms of topic and methodology. Fellows from Nigeria, Italy, Australia, Japan, China, Russia, Israel, India, Great Britain, South Africa, Argentina, Spain, Sri Lanka, and Hungary are among those who have participated so far. Their research has focused on topics as diverse as Jewish writers of the 1930s, Gay life in New York City, the urban geography of Chicago, American female missionaries in Japan, the "English-Only" movement in the U.S., and many other issues in U.S. history, literature, political science, social anthropology, media studies, and visual culture.

    32. Women S Studies US Literature
    us Literature. S. Cahill, ed. Writing Women s Lives An Anthology of the author s growing up Black in the 1930s and 1940s in the American South.
    http://www.utexas.edu/depts/wgs/Publications/hsr/uslit.html

    33. About Us
    The lecture, in cooperation with the UCLA Center for Jewish studies, Friedlander characterizes 1930s Germany as a world grotesque and chilling under
    http://www.1939club.com/1939 UCLA.htm
    Welcome to The "1939" Club Our Mission Our History Membership Donations ... Past Activities and Honorees Programs with UCLA Chair on Holocaust Studies Saul Friedlander Profile Lecture Series- Great Jewish Cities: Jewish Berlin Jewish Prague Jewish Salonika Jewish Sarajevo ... Links Chair on Holocaust Studies
    Twenty years ago The "1939" Club established a chair on the Holocaust Studies at UCLA, the first such chair in a public University in the United States. A distinguished list of Holocaust scholars have taught under the auspices of the Chair including Israel Gutman, Ezra Mendelsohn, Michael Marrus and Shlomo Aronson. In 1987 Professor Saul Friedlander became the permanent holder of the Chair. (See profile on Professor Friedlander). UCLA Lecture Series Jewish Berlin
    The "1939" Club, through its Education Fund and the UCLA Center for Jewish Studies, sponsored the fifth event in its ongoing series on Great European Jewish Cities on October 26, 1997, at UCLA. This series explores the rich, cultural diversity of Jewish urban life in Europe prior to the Holocaust.

    34. RSIE Japan/US Economic Studies
    Japan/us Economic studies. Japan s Economic Recovery, Robert M. Stern, ed., Recovery Perspectives from European Economic Recovery in the 1930s
    http://www.fordschool.umich.edu/rsie/JapanUS.html
    Japan/US Economic Studies
    • Japan's Economic Recovery , Robert M. Stern, ed., Edward Elgar Publishers, July 2003.
        1. Stern, Robert M., "Introduction and Overview"
        2. Fukao, Kyoji, Toshihiro Okubo, and Robert M Stern, "Trade Diversion under NAFTA"
        3. Deardorff, Alan V., "Time and Trade: The Role of Time in Determining the Structure and Effects of International Trade, with an Application to Japan"
        4. Greaney, Theresa M., "An Analysis of Japan's Changing Import Behavior"
        5. Head, Keith and John Ries, "Sources of Variation in the Productivity of Japanese Manufacturers"
        6. Ito, Keiko and Kyoji Fukao, "Foreign Direct Investment in Japan: Empirical Analysis Based on the Establishment and Enterprise Census"
        7. Kimura, Fukunari and Kozo Kiyota, "Exports and Foreign Direct Investment Accelerate Corporate Reforms: Evidence from Japanese Micro Data"
        8. Saxonhouse, Gary R., "Prospective Japanese Economic Recovery: Perspectives from European Economic Recovery in the 1930s"
        9. Fukao, Mitsuhiro, "Japan's Lost Decade and Weaknesses in Its Corporate Governance Structure"
        10. Fujiki, Hiroshi and Shigenori Shiratsuka, "Zero-Interest-Rate Policy, the Forward-Rate Curve, and Policy-Duration Effect"

    35. Theology And Religion: Postgraduate Islamic Studies
    degree courses available and the opportunity to get in touch with us via thisweb site. Islamic studies has been taught at Birmingham since the 1930s.
    http://www.theology.bham.ac.uk/postgrad/islam/
    Theology and Religion: Postgraduate Islamic Studies
    University Fast Find Site Index Schools / Departments Telephone Directory Email Directory Useful Contacts Frequently Asked Questions Directions / Maps Acronym Directory Vacancies THEOLOGY AND RELIGION: POSTGRADUATE ISLAMIC STUDIES
    Department of Theology

    Resources

    Academic Staff

    Research and Publications
    ...
    Contacting Us

    Islamic Studies Links
    British Muslims Monthly Survey

    Transnational Sufism

    University Links University Postgraduate Prospectus School of Historical Studies Information Services: Theology On-Line Application Form ... Information for International Students SEARCH THIS SITE SEARCH WHOLE UNIVERSITY Welcome to the Department of Theology and Religion's Web Pages for Post Graduate Islamic Studies. You will find information here on the Centre for the Study of Islam and Christian-Muslim Relations (CSIC), with details on all our activities, degree courses available and the opportunity to get in touch with us via this web site. Islamic studies has been taught at Birmingham since the 1930s. In 1976 the Centre for the Study of Islam and Christian-Muslim Relations (CSIC) was founded, and in 1991 an undergraduate programme was started at the then Westhill College. In the last few years both of these units have become part of the University of Birmingham in the Department of Theology and Religion , School of Historical Studies. Please click on the links below for more information. You will also find these on the menu bar on the left of each page.

    36. EH.Net Encyclopedia: History Of Labor Turnover In The U.S.
    on turnover among us workers is available from a series of studies focusing In the 1930s and 1940s the volatility in labor turnover increased and
    http://www.eh.net/encyclopedia/?article=owen.turnover

    37. Latino Studies Home Page IUB
    “Latino studies” refers to the study of those us populations whose roots are We will focus on 1930s1950s constructions of Latinos/as and the ways in
    http://www.indiana.edu/~latino/courses_latino.htm

    Home
    Faculty Courses Newsletter ...
    Images
    Program Overview Undergraduate Courses
    L101 Introduction to Latino/a Studies
    This course is intended to provide an introduction and overview on Latino issues. The course will begin with a brief overview of the histories of the major Latinos national origin groups in the United States. The bulk of the course will examine a number of topics and issues that are key to understanding contemporary Latinos; e.g., immigration, language, education, employment, etc. The third and briefest part of the course will build upon the previous sections by asking how the history and current status of Latinos might influence their near term future, under various assumptions. The goals of this course include the following: 1) helping its student develop an informed basis for talking and thinking about Latinos; 2) developing an awareness on how Latinos fit or don't fit into American society; and, 3) applying this knowledge to assess current issues and future possibilities. The c L102 Introduction to Latino/a History
    General inquiry into the historical and cultural heritage of Latina/os who have lived or are currently living in what is today the United States. Through readings and discussion of major texts, this course studies varied histories of Mexican, Puerto Rican

    38. Conference Report: American Historiography: Approaches, Issues, Controversies 27
    Historical Memory and 1930s America Kriste Lindenmeyer (University of Manfred Berg, Center for us studies at the Leucorea Foundation, Wittenberg
    http://www.zusas.uni-halle.de/ev5_dgfahist_conferenceReport_en.html
    Introduction Events Staff Library ... MLU C O N F E R E N C E R E P O R T : American Historiography: Approaches, Issues, Controversies th Annual Meeting of the Historians in the German Association for American Studies. Stiftung Leucorea, Lutherstadt Wittenberg, February 11 to 13, 2005.
    The 2005 annual meeting of the historians in the German Association for American Studies was hosted by the Center for U.S. Studies at the Leucorea Foundation, Wittenberg. Major financial and logistical support was provided by the U.S. Embassy in Berlin and the Leucorea Foundation in Wittenberg. The conference was dedicated to taking stock of major historiographical trends and developments that have shaped scholarship on U.S. history over the past few decades. In his case study "Trouble in Sarkhan: 'The Ugly American' Revisited," Andreas Etges (Free University of Berlin) focused on ideas and ideology in the history of American foreign relations. Taking a closer look at William Lederer's and Eugene Burdick's 1958 novel "The Ugly American," Etges described its immense public success and the way it shaped debates on foreign aid as well as on the recruitment and training of the diplomatic corps. While highly critical of Americans overseas, the book's message is based on the belief in the superiority of the American way of life. By promoting simplistic modernization theories, the "Ugly American" guided foreign policymakers in the 1960s. Eckhardt Fuchs's (University of Mannheim) paper "From 'Western Civ' to 'Cultural Wars': Teaching and Writing World History at U.S. American Universities in the Twentieth Century" presented an overview of the development of World History at American secondary schools and universities in the twentieth century, especially since the late 1960s. Tracing the debates and struggles over reforming the curricula of both high schools and colleges, Fuchs challenged the prevailing notion that teaching World History in higher education represents an unbroken success story.

    39. Millikin University Academics
    IN 250 us studies Spring 2001 back to university studies the history ofthe welfare system from the 1930s through the Welfare Reform Act of 1996,
    http://www.millikin.edu/academics/UniversityWidePrograms/IN250.html
    IN 250 - U.S. Studies
    Spring 2001
    back to university studies
    U.S. Culture in the 1970's
    U.S. Captivity and Slave Narratives

    Poverty and Welfare Reform
    ...
    Life in Interior Alaska
    IN250-01 That '70's Class: U.S. Culture in the 1970's (Professor Becky Bradway-Hesse) Although the '70's are often viewed as the "disco/polyester decade," more happened than retro fashion. The '70's witness the evolution of '60's optimism and rebellion into new forms. This is the decade of feminism, Watergate, Kent State, and the Vietnam War; of punk, glam, folk-rock, and "I Will Survive" ; of Altamont survivors, veterans, and hippies turning corporate, political, or simply tired. While '60's social critique evolved (among some) into individualistic materialism, the decade also demonstrated quiet strides in the rights of women, gays, and African-Americans, particularly through and in the arts.
    We will read fiction and non-fiction from popular and controversial writers who record the end of the '60's and the changes of the '70's. Writers covered include Kurt Vonnegut, Rita Mae Brown, Tim O'Brien, Alex Haley, Gloria Steinem, Richard Brautigan, Lester Bangs, and Toni Morrison. Popular music from artists as diverse as the Talking Heads, David Bowie, and Donna Summer will be discussed. Clips from films will be shown, including The Deer Hunter Gimme Shelter All the President's Men Annie Hall Saturday Night Fever Five Easy Pieces

    40. A Historical Overview Of Hydrologic Studies Of Artifical Recharge In The U. S. G
    Significant interest developed during the 1930s, particularly in Historicalreferences for artificial recharge studies in the us Geological Survey
    http://water.usgs.gov/ogw/pubs/ofr0289/epw_historical.html
    Water Resources
    A Historical Overview of Hydrologic Studies of Artificial Recharge in the U.S. Geological Survey
    By E.P. Weeks
    U.S. Geological Survey, P.O. Box 25046, MS 413, Denver Federal Center, Lakewood, Colorado 80225 Return to Table of Contents
    Abstract
    An overview of artificial recharge studies requires a precise definition of the topic to be covered. Todd (1959) defines artificial recharge, for his bibliography, as “the practice of increasing by artificial means the amount of water that enters a ground-water reservoir.” For this review, a narrower definition is invoked that includes direct recharge of potable water through spreading basins, pits, and injection or drainage wells, but excludes induced infiltration from wells, galleries, and collectors placed near streams. Deep well waste disposal and irrigation with sewage effluent as a recharge mechanism are not included. Literature reviews, except those used here, and papers that only mention artificial recharge as a solution to water-supply problems are also omitted. Sources of information for this review include Todd’s (1959) bibliography of artificial recharge through 1954, Signor et al.’s (1970) bibliography for 1955-67, and the web-based Water Resources Abstracts for the period after 1967. Studies that have not resulted in citation by those sources, such as those summarized in administrative reports, are thus not included.

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