The Rise and Fall of the New Deal Order, 1930-1980Steve Fraser, Gary Gerstle Princeton University Press, 2020 M07 21 - 344 pages The description for this book, The Rise and Fall of the New Deal Order, 1930-1980, will be forthcoming. |
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Page xi
... ethnic traditions, their families and their neighborhoods. Voters thus developed profound emotional loyalties to parties; these loyalties, in turn, influenced individual electoral behavior far more than rational reflections on a party's ...
... ethnic traditions, their families and their neighborhoods. Voters thus developed profound emotional loyalties to parties; these loyalties, in turn, influenced individual electoral behavior far more than rational reflections on a party's ...
Page xvii
... ethnic districts of the Northeast, resisted the modernist code of May's middle-class suburban families, and cleaved instead to a traditionalism rooted in Protestant or Catholic spiritual codes. Some briefly found a political voice in ...
... ethnic districts of the Northeast, resisted the modernist code of May's middle-class suburban families, and cleaved instead to a traditionalism rooted in Protestant or Catholic spiritual codes. Some briefly found a political voice in ...
Page xxi
... southerners. The implementation of antipoverty and affirmative action legislation, meanwhile, generated a sense of class injustice—“reverse discrimination”— among large numbers of ethnic whites in the North. These INTRODUCTION xxi.
... southerners. The implementation of antipoverty and affirmative action legislation, meanwhile, generated a sense of class injustice—“reverse discrimination”— among large numbers of ethnic whites in the North. These INTRODUCTION xxi.
Page xxii
Steve Fraser, Gary Gerstle. among large numbers of ethnic whites in the North. These grievances quickly became part of a moral critique of “limousine liberalism.” White traditionalists, North and South, saw black and student rioting ...
Steve Fraser, Gary Gerstle. among large numbers of ethnic whites in the North. These grievances quickly became part of a moral critique of “limousine liberalism.” White traditionalists, North and South, saw black and student rioting ...
Page 8
... ethnic conflicts, the American business community sharply divided. On the central questions of labor and foreign economic policy, most firms in the Republican bloc were driven by the logic of the postwar economy to intensify their ...
... ethnic conflicts, the American business community sharply divided. On the central questions of labor and foreign economic policy, most firms in the Republican bloc were driven by the logic of the postwar economy to intensify their ...
Contents
Toward | 32 |
The Labor Question | 55 |
The New Deal and the Idea of the State | 85 |
Politics and | 153 |
THE NEW DEAL POLITICAL ORDER | 183 |
The Failure and Success of the New Radicalism | 212 |
The Rise of the Silent Majority | 243 |
A Realignment | 269 |
Epilogue | 294 |
Index | 301 |
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