An elegy��ngry, funny, and powerfully detailed��bout the slow death of a Detroit auto plant and an American way of life.
How does a country dismantle a century's worth of its industrial heritage? To answer that question, Paul Clemens investigates the 2006 closing of one of America's most potent symbols: a Detroit auto plant. Prior to its closing, the Budd Company stamping plant on Detroit's East Side, built in 1919, was one of the oldest active auto plants in America's foremost industrial city��ne whose history includes the nation's proudest moments and those of its working class. Its closing also reflects the character of the country in a new era��he sad, brutal process of picking it apart and sending it, piece by piece, to the countries that now have use for its machines.
Punching Out is an up-close report, at once tender and angry, from the meanest, sharpest edge of America's deindustrializa簫tion, and a lament for a working-class culture that once defined a prosperous America��nd that is now on the verge of eco簫nomic extinction.