Sanora Babb (1907-2005) became an acclaimed short story writer, poet, and author of three novels. Dorothy Babb (1909-1995) frequently collaborated with Sanora in her work. Douglas Wixson, Professor Emeritus at the University of Missouri-Rolla, is the author of Worker-Writer in America: Jack Conroy and the Tradition of Midwestern Literary Radicalism, 1898-1990. He currently lives in Austin, Texas.
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"Migrant Farmer," by Dorothy Babb Preface Acknowledgments Introduction: The Babb Sisters 1. The Dirty Plate Trail 2. Field Notes Oklahoma Panhandle, 1934 "Triple A, Dusted Out" Note on the government's AAA program to reduce hog production and corn acreage The Dispossessed Labor Conditions Farmer-Industrialist Labor Protest Organization of labor Government Camps Fascist characteristics of the campaign against the migratory workers in California Visalia 2/24/38 Labor Contractor Kinds of camps in California Birthrate In answer to the frequent threat... In the fields, 1938 Large Landowners Rag Town Refugee Needs A day in the camps San Joaquin Valley, California, 1938 Thirty-seven varieties of religon... Striking Workers, Angry Growers March, 1938 October 29, 1938 Two stories of labor spies Notes for a Novel 3. Reportage Migratory Farm Workers in California (1938) There Ain't No Food (1938) Farmers without Farms (New Masses, 21 June 1938) We Sure Struck It Tuff: The Storm Dealing in Major Catastrophes (New Masses, 23 May 1939) Letter to Dorothy Babb (May 1938) 4. Dust Bowl Tales The Dark Earth (The Magazine, Nov.-Dec. 1934) Morning in Imperial Valley (Kansas Magazine, 1941) Whose Names Are Unknown 5. The Dust Bowl as Site of Memory 6. Epilogue: Letters from the Fields Notes Bibliography Index

