More from The Center for Documentary Studies
Five Farms, Episode Five: Succession
(00:54:00)
From: The Center for Documentary Studies
For each of the families of Five Farms, the question looms large: Who will take over the farm? Succession features the next generation --- the young people in each farm ...
Five Farms, Episode Four: Harvest
(00:54:00)
From: The Center for Documentary Studies
Autumn is harvest time. That means Iowa corn and soybeans; fruit dried in the California sun; greens, beans, and potatoes; slaughtered hogs and beef trucked to market. It ...
Five Farms, Episode Three: Stewardship
(00:54:00)
From: The Center for Documentary Studies
Stewardship focuses on the daily choices farming families make to preserve their land, water, and air --- the fundamentals of farming. During mid-summer visits to a ...
Five Farms, Episode Two: Nurturing
(00:54:00)
From: The Center for Documentary Studies
Early summer is a time of long days on the family farm, perfect for nurturing crops and animals as they approach the peak of growing season. Nurturing illuminates the daily ...
Five Farms, Episode One: Planting
(00:54:00)
From: The Center for Documentary Studies
Spring planting on the family farm is the time of the annual gamble --- on the alchemies of nature, on the health of livestock, on future fall harvest market prices. Planting ...
Recycled
(00:54:00)
From: The Center for Documentary Studies
A compilation of short documentaries on the theme, "Recycled," exploring aspects of human life that get repeated and re-used, for better and for worse. Produced by students ...
Travels with Mike: In Search of America 50 Years After Steinbeck
(00:54:00)
From: The Center for Documentary Studies
A one-hour special revisiting Steinbeck's iconic book, Travels with Charley, and journeying into today's America through the eyes of contemporary artists. Episodes in Sag ...
Thelonious Monk, Tar Heel
(00:08:04)
From: The Center for Documentary Studies
A musical portrait that explores the Jazz great's overlooked Southern roots.
Southern Slices: Summer Institute Stories from CDS
(00:53:57)
From: The Center for Documentary Studies
A collection of student pieces from CDS "audio camp," 2003 - 2007.
Racial Cleansing in America
(00:13:26)
From: The Center for Documentary Studies
A short doc exploring the curious legacy of a "racial cleansing" in a small Kentucky town.
Piece Description
It's sinking in among Americans that the nation's largest wave of immigration did not happen a century ago. It's happening now. About 35-million of us were born in other countries. That's one in eight residents of the United States. Immigrants come from all over the globe, but Latino immigration is remaking the country. And not just on the coasts and in the Southwest. Siler City, North Carolina used to be the kind of town where almost everyone, black and white, had roots going back a century or two. Characters on the Andy Griffith Show mentioned Siler City, and the actor who played Aunt Bee retired there because it reminded her of Mayberry. It was just about the last place a Spanish-speaking immigrant was likely to land. That started to change in the 1990's. Today, thanks to chicken processing jobs that no one else wants, Siler City is about half Latino. It's not unusual; North Carolina and other southeastern states have some of the fastest-growing Latino populations in the country. Many longtime residents of Siler City say they're not especially troubled by the fact that many Latino workers are undocumented. What does make some uneasy is the way this new population is transforming the racial and cultural flavor of their town. John Biewen and Tennessee Watson of the Center for Documentary Studies at Duke University produced this portrait of a town in transition...in the Nuevo South.
Broadcast History
Part of American RadioWorks special, "Pueblo, USA," distributed 9/25/08
Transcript
Nuevo South transcript
Host intro [not included in audio file]:
It?s sinking in among Americans that the nation?s largest wave of immigration did not happen a century ago. It?s happening now. About 35-million of us were born in other countries. That?s one in eight residents of the United States. Immigrants come from all over the globe, but Latino immigration is remaking the country. And not just on the coasts and in the Southwest.
Siler City, North Carolina used to be the kind of town where almost everyone, black and white, had roots going back a century or two. Characters on the Andy Griffith Show mentioned Siler City, and the actor who played Aunt Bee retired there because it reminded her of Mayberry. It was just about the last place a Spanish-speaking immigrant was likely to land. That started to change in the 1990?s. Today, thanks to chicken processing jobs that no...
Read the full transcript
Timing and Cues
Uninterrupted 30:12





