Economists and politicians told us that the recession was over, though some of them now worry about it taking a double dip. For those of us living farther from the ledger sheets and closer to the reality of what's happening in our towns and on our streets, this has been and remains a depression.
It's hard to make the word stick, however, because we haven't developed the iconography yet. We don't have bread lines, dance marathons, guys selling apples on street corners or men jumping from high buildings because they've been wiped out in the stock market.
The pain and suffering has only been superficially covered by the news media -- but it has surely not been addressed by our artists.
In the 1930s, John Steinbeck chronicled the Depression as it played out in the lives of the Joads, his fictional Okies in "The Grapes of Wrath." He invented those memorable characters to vivify all the abstractions of the policymakers and to give literary voice to the suffering so many Americans were experiencing.
Other artists also were telling the tale, making people see, hear and feel the pain as only the arts can do. There was Dorothea Lange taking photos and Woody Guthrie writing songs. Hollywood was doing its part, too, and not only with a movie version of Steinbeck's novel.
Unlike current audiences, moviegoers in the '30s were persistently reminded by what was on the screen of what awaited them when they resumed their lives outside the theater. Even "King Kong," generally conceded to be pioneering escapist fare, begins with Fay Wray in a bread line.
In our own times, when Iraq and Afghanistan war vets are suffering double-digit rates of unemployment, you can't find much mention of those veterans and their struggles in our movies.
In 1932, "I Am a Fugitive From a Chain Gang" gave cinematic life to the kind of men who would march on Washington as part of the Bonus Army, a legion of out-of-work World War I vets who squatted in the nation's capital to bring attention to their plight -- an appeal that was ultimately met not with aid but with violence.