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 vii
... Labor and the Eclipse of Social Democracy in the Postwar Era NELSON LICHTENSTEIN Cold War—Warm Hearth: Politics and the Family in Postwar America ELAINE TYLER MAY 32 55 85 122 153 PART II: 10 THE NEW DEAL POLITICAL ORDER: DECLINE AND.
... Labor and the Eclipse of Social Democracy in the Postwar Era NELSON LICHTENSTEIN Cold War—Warm Hearth: Politics and the Family in Postwar America ELAINE TYLER MAY 32 55 85 122 153 PART II: 10 THE NEW DEAL POLITICAL ORDER: DECLINE AND.
Page x
... social trends. Fundamental changes in political life—those which produce a change in party systems—are seen as issuing from crises in the nation's economy, social structure, and political culture. Thus the dissolution of the second ...
... social trends. Fundamental changes in political life—those which produce a change in party systems—are seen as issuing from crises in the nation's economy, social structure, and political culture. Thus the dissolution of the second ...
Page xiii
... social enfranchisement, this new political elite saw its opportunity and seized a portion of state power. Members of this elite were both the architects and the administrators of that famed New Deal welfare state that had taken shape by ...
... social enfranchisement, this new political elite saw its opportunity and seized a portion of state power. Members of this elite were both the architects and the administrators of that famed New Deal welfare state that had taken shape by ...
Page xiv
... social Keynesianism,” and their more conservative, fiscaloriented program “commercial Keynesianism.” We could then suggest that the regulatory approach favored by many New Dealers in 1936 and 1937 was a form of social Keynesianism that ...
... social Keynesianism,” and their more conservative, fiscaloriented program “commercial Keynesianism.” We could then suggest that the regulatory approach favored by many New Dealers in 1936 and 1937 was a form of social Keynesianism that ...
Page xv
... social Keynesianism, though confined by the early 1940s to the progressive wing of the labor movement and the “left-liberal” wing of the Democratic party, doggedly carried on their battle for political power (and the control of the ...
... social Keynesianism, though confined by the early 1940s to the progressive wing of the labor movement and the “left-liberal” wing of the Democratic party, doggedly carried on their battle for political power (and the control of the ...
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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