『Bullfrogs, Bingo, and the Little House on the Prairie』のカバーアート

Bullfrogs, Bingo, and the Little House on the Prairie

How Innovators of the Great Depression Made the Best of the Worst of Times (The Birth, Challenge, and Triumph of Consumer Culture in America: 1920s, 1930s, 1940s, Book 2)

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Bullfrogs, Bingo, and the Little House on the Prairie

著者: Jason Voiovich
ナレーター: Jason Voiovich
タイトルを¥2,170 で購入し、プレミアムプランを2か月間無料で試す

無料体験終了後は月額1,500円で自動更新します。いつでも退会できます。

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このコンテンツについて

Necessity is the mother of invention. It’s also the father of character.

In history class, we’ve been taught that the Great Depression was all about crashing stock markets, snaking breadlines, and ecological disasters. We learned that FDR tried to put it right with the New Deal, but it was only World War II that finally succeeded in revitalizing the American economy. But that’s not the whole story.

The “Greatest Generation” didn’t earn that title by sitting around hoping things would get better. The hard times of the Great Depression led to a surge in innovation that we never learned about in school. Did you know that refrigerator sales spiked during the 1930s? Did you know this was the decade that brought us blockbuster monster movies and animated films? Did you know these were the years many families adopted their first dog? Those are just a handful of the stories you were never taught. This “tapas menu” take on the 1930s shows that bad times create the most surprising outcomes.

©2025 Jaywalker Publishing LLC (P)2025 Jaywalker Publishing LLC
事業開発・起業 人類学 南北アメリカ大陸 米国 起業家精神
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