|
Untitled Document
FORDLANDIA: The Rise
and Fall of Henry Ford’s Forgotten Jungle City.
By Greg Grandin. Metropolitan. 416 pp. $27.50
Reviewed by Paul Maliszewski
Ford’s vision for
his outpost was grand: a town complete with schools and Cape
Cod–style houses as well as high wages and health care for all,
both the American managers and the Brazilians attracted by word that the
company was hiring people by the thousands. Ford would encourage workers to
grow flowers and vegetables and eat only whole-wheat bread and
unpolished rice. He would bring electricity to the jungle, and with it,
telephones, washing machines, record players, and refrigerators. Some of
his goals seemed quaint, such as staging poetry recitations and promoting
ballroom dancing, with square dances on weekends. Others were downright
peculiar, such as his intention to have nurseries feed soymilk to babies
because, after growing up on a farm, he despised cows. Ford wanted to
create American towns, Grandin writes, that just happened to be in the
Amazon, with “central squares, sidewalks, indoor plumbing, hospitals,
manicured lawns, movie theaters, swimming pools, golf courses, and, of
course, Model Ts and As rolling down their paved streets.”
 |
Printer
Friendly |
Paul
Maliszewski is the author of Fakers: Hoaxers, Con Artists, Counterfeiters, and Other Great Pretenders, published earlier this year, and Prayer and Parable, a forthcoming short story collection.
Reprinted from Summer
2009 Wilson Quarterly
This article may not be resold, reprinted,
or redistributed for compensation of any kind without prior written
permission from the author. For further reprint information, please
contact Permissions, The Wilson Quarterly, One Woodrow Wilson
Plaza, 1300 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Washington, D.C.
Phone:202/691-4200
E-mail:wq@wilsoncenter.org
|