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 xv
... force us to treat the 1940s, rather than the 1930s, as the politically formative years of the New Deal order. Only in the mid-to-late 1940s did the fate of modern liberalism come to depend on the successful operation of a ...
... force us to treat the 1940s, rather than the 1930s, as the politically formative years of the New Deal order. Only in the mid-to-late 1940s did the fate of modern liberalism come to depend on the successful operation of a ...
Page xix
... force of the civil rights movement on the other, the War on Poverty became entirely associated with the problems of black Americans. Katznelson admires the inventiveness and boldness of Great Society policymakers in pushing the limits ...
... force of the civil rights movement on the other, the War on Poverty became entirely associated with the problems of black Americans. Katznelson admires the inventiveness and boldness of Great Society policymakers in pushing the limits ...
Page 3
... force was idle. Homeless, often starving, people camped out in parks and fields, while only the virtual collapse of real-estate markets in many districts checked a mammoth liquidation of homes and farms by banks and insurance companies ...
... force was idle. Homeless, often starving, people camped out in parks and fields, while only the virtual collapse of real-estate markets in many districts checked a mammoth liquidation of homes and farms by banks and insurance companies ...
Page 6
... force inside it was powerful enough to contain the CIO and simultaneously launch a sweeping attack on major industrial interests? These analyses also slip past the biggest puzzle that the New Deal poses. They offer few clues as to why ...
... force inside it was powerful enough to contain the CIO and simultaneously launch a sweeping attack on major industrial interests? These analyses also slip past the biggest puzzle that the New Deal poses. They offer few clues as to why ...
Page 7
... force. In addition, with the momentous exception of the chemical industry, these capital-intensive firms were both ... forces presented few sources of tension and who had for over a decade supported a more broadly international foreign ...
... force. In addition, with the momentous exception of the chemical industry, these capital-intensive firms were both ... forces presented few sources of tension and who had for over a decade supported a more broadly international foreign ...
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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