In his autobiography All Souls: A Family Story From Southie, Michael Patrick MacDonald discloses on the adversities his family experienced while living in the projects of South Boston.  One historical force present throughout the book is social movement.  This is seen when the African American schools of Roxbury were being integrated with the schools in Southie causing a response of chaos and rallies.  The government was a major social structure or institution involved in the MacDonald’s lives.  This governmental influence is seen through the family’s dependence on welfare and also through Whitey Bulger and his relationships with the politicians.  Another social structure seen in the book was religion.  The whole project was Irish Catholic and not afraid to represent that as part of their identity.  

        MacDonald tells the detailed story of his family by tracing through his memories of growing up in Old Colony, a customarily Irish Catholic project of South Boston.  Southie, as it is referred to, was a working class community typically populated by families similar to that of the MacDonald’s.  The majority were fatherless, Irish Catholic families who relied on the welfare system and were living in the poorly kept projects.  Despite this, the people of Southie were a tight-knit community who were proud not only to be Irish, but to be from Southie.  “There was always this feeling that we were protected, as if the whole neighborhood was watching our backs for threats, watching for all the enemies we could never really define.  No ‘outsiders’ could mess with us” (p.2).  

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        The author grew up the middle child among many siblings and observed a great deal of

the racial hatred and gang violence that was taking place in Southie during his most

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impressionable years.  He recalled vivid memories of the anti-busing riots of the early 70's and the chaos that occurred before his very eyes.  Among various other life-altering events, MacDonald was forced to experience the untimely and unfortunate deaths of his brothers, sisters, and friends.  Growing-up over the years MacDonald began to realize that Southie was not actually “the best place in the world”.  Instead of a ...

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