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Chapter 24

Chapter 24. Norton Media Library. Give Me Liberty! An American History Second Edition Volume 2. by Eric Foner. I. Trends in postwar economy. “Golden age” of American capitalism Economic expansion, growth Wide-ranging improvements in living standards Breadth of access to a better life

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Chapter 24

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  1. Chapter 24 Norton Media Library Give Me Liberty! An American History Second EditionVolume 2 by Eric Foner

  2. I. Trends in postwar economy • “Golden age” of American capitalism • Economic expansion, growth • Wide-ranging improvements in living standards • Breadth of access to a better life • Low unemployment • Decline in poverty rate • Industrial supremacy around world • Emergence of West and South as centers of military production, mobilization • Twilight of industrial age • Gathering decline in manufacturing • Shift toward white-collar occupations

  3. I. Trends in postwar economy (cont’d) • Transformation in agricultural America • Acceleration of trend toward fewer and larger farms • Mechanization of southern farming • Expansion of corporate farming out West • Fruits and vegetables • Migrant labor

  4. Suburbia • Rise • Pace and magnitude • Central role in economic expansion • Symbols and manifestations • Levittown • Malls • California • Los Angeles; “centerless city” • Freeways, cars • Shopping centers • lawns

  5. II. Suburbia (cont’d) • Consumer culture • Growth and spread • Ideology of American consumerism • As core of freedom • As measure of American superiority • Key elements • Television • Spreading presence • Growing prominence as leisure activity • Themes of programming, advertising

  6. II. Suburbia (cont’d) • Consumer culture • Key elements • Automobile • Place in “standard consumer package” • Role in economic boom • Impact on American landscape, travel habits • Emergence as symbol of freedom • Female sphere • Place in labor force • Rising numbers • Limited aims • Ideal of male as breadwinner, woman as homemaker

  7. II. Suburbia (cont’d) • Female sphere • Affirmation of family ideal • Younger marriage age • Fewer divorces • Baby boom • Separate spheres as Cold War weapon • Receding of feminism • Exclusion of blacks; racial wall between city and suburbs • Pervasiveness • Sources and mechanisms • Federal government • Banks and developers • Residents

  8. II. Suburbia (cont’d) • Exclusion of blacks; racial wall between city and suburbs • Resulting patterns • Suburbs for whites • Fading of ethnic divisions • Fear of black encroachment • Urban ghettoes for blacks, Puerto Ricans • Bleakness of conditions and opportunities • Barriers to escape • Self-reinforcing dynamic of racial exclusion

  9. III. Celebratory perspectives on postwar America • “End of ideology” • Liberal consensus that American ills had been solved or needed minor tweaks • “Judeo-Christian” heritage • Themes • Group pluralism • Freedom of religion • Underlying trends • Fading of religious bigotry • Secularization of American life • “Free enterprise” as essential part of freedom • Marketing of “free enterprise” outlooks • Conservative wing • Liberal wing

  10. III. Celebratory perspectives on postwar America (cont’d) • “People’s capitalism” • Receptiveness to big business • Heralding of classless society • Two strains of conservative renewal • Libertarians • Ideas • Individual autonomy • Limited government • Unregulated capitalism • Absolute free market • Special appeal among businessmen of South and West • Leading voice: Milton Friedman

  11. III. Celebratory perspectives on postwar America (cont’d) • Two strains of conservative renewal • New conservatives • Ideas • Free World vs. communism • Absolute truth vs. toleration of difference • Christian values vs. moral decay • Community and tradition vs. excessive individualism • Government as agent of moral regulation • Leading voices: Russell Kirk, Richard Weaver • Central points of divergence: “free man” vs. ”good man” • Common targets during the Fifties • Soviet Union • “Big government”

  12. Eisenhower era • Election of 1952 • Republican ticket • Dwight D. Eisenhower • Political appeal • Decision to run as Republican • Nomination • Richard M. Nixon • Political rise • Anticommunist style • Reputation for opportunism, dishonesty • Populist brand of free-market conservatism

  13. IV. Eisenhower era (cont’d) • Election of 1952 • Nixon scandal • “Checkers speech” • Demonstration of television’s significance • Eisenhower victory over Adlai Stevenson (first of two) • Eisenhower’s domestic policy: “Modern Republicanism” • Pro-business administration • Fiscal and budgetary conservatism • Program aimed to sever ties with Depression era Republicans • Retention, expansion of New Deal programs • Use of government to spur productivity, employment • Key examples • Interstate highway system • National Defense Education Act

  14. Map 94

  15. IV. Eisenhower era (cont’d) • Eisenhower’s domestic policy: Modern Republicanism • Motivations • Cold War • Economic prosperity • Labor-management “social contract” • Preconditions • Taming of organized labor; Taft-Hartley Act • Consolidation of organized labor; merger of AFL-CIO • Terms • Outcome for working-class America • Prosperity for union workers • Mixed outcome for nonunion workers • Indirect benefits • Marginalization

  16. IV. Eisenhower era (cont’d) • Labor-management “social contract” • Fraying of social contract; 1959 steel strike • Ebb and flow of U.S.-Soviet tensions • Acquisition by each side of hydrogen bomb; subsequent nuclear arms race • Doctrine of “massive retaliation”; “mutually assured destruction (MAD)” • Soviet attack on ally = nuclear assault • Announcement by John Foster Dulles • Characterization by critics as “brinksmanship” • Legacy • Sobering effects on superpowers • Climate of fear

  17. IV. Eisenhower era (cont’d) • Ebb and flow of U.S.-Soviet tensions • Eisenhower-Khrushchev thaw • First steps • Korean armistice • Death of Stalin; succession by Nikita Khrushchev • Geneva summit • Khrushchev denunciations of Stalin, call for “coexistence” • Setback: Hungary crisis • Soviet repression of uprising • Eisenhower refusal to intervene

  18. IV. Eisenhower era (cont’d) • Ebb and flow of U.S.-Soviet tensions • Eisenhower-Khrushchev thaw • Resumption of thaw • Weapons testing halt • Khrushchev visit • Setback: U-2 spy plane • Cold War in Third World • Emergence of Third World • Origins of term: countries non-aligned w/ either capitalism (First) or communism (Second) • Bandung Conference (April 1955) • Cold War shaped U.S. policy w/ Third World

  19. IV. Eisenhower era (cont’d) • Cold War in Third World • Decolonization • Pace • India, Pakistan • British Gold Coast (Ghana) • Subsequent spread of independence • Cold War context • U.S. fear of communist influence • Participation of communists, socialists, in independence struggles • Third World aversion to Cold War alignment

  20. IV. Eisenhower era (cont’d) • Cold War in Third World • Cold War as determinant of U.S. alliances, interventions • Covert subversion of sovereign governments • Guatemala • Iran • Extension of containment to Middle East • Suez crisis • Eisenhower Doctrine • Lebanon intervention

  21. IV. Eisenhower era (cont’d) • Cold War in Third World • Cold War as determinant of U.S. alliances, interventions • Vietnam • Postwar support for French colonialism • Defeat of French by Ho Chi Minh’s nationalists • Geneva agreement: divided Vietnam and called for elections • U.S.-backed scuttling of elections • Support for unpopular Ngo Dinh Diem regime • Long-term legacies of interventions • Guatemala • Iran • Vietnam

  22. IV. Eisenhower era (cont’d) • Mass society and its critics • Society in the modern, industrial era which celebrated affluence and the either-or mentality of the Cold War • Leading voices • Hans J. Morgenthau, “new accumulations” of corporate power • C. Wright Mills, “power elite” • David Riesman’s The Lonely Crowd • John Kenneth Galbraith’s The Affluent Society • William Whyte’s The Organization Man • Vance Packard’s The Hidden Persuaders • Limited impact on popular consciousness

  23. IV. Eisenhower era (cont’d) • Cultural rebels • Youth • Themes • Alienation from middle-class norms • Sexual provocativeness; rock and roll • Leading examples • J.D. Salinger’s The Catcher in the Rye • Blackboard Jungle, Rebel Without a Cause • Elvis Presley • Mainstream reaction • “Juvenile delinquency” panic • Codes of conduct

  24. IV. Eisenhower era (cont’d) • Cultural rebels • Playboy sensibility • Gay and lesbian subcultures • The Beats • Themes • Rejection of materialism, conformity, Cold War militarization • Embrace of spontaneity, immediate pleasure, sexual experiments • Key Works • Jack Kerouac’s On the Road • Allen Ginsberg’s Howl

  25. Emergence of civil rights movement • Preconditions • World War II challenge to racial system • Black migration North • Postwar global developments • Cold War • Decolonization • Segregation and inequality in 1950’s America • Breadth of black poverty, barriers to opportunity • National breadth of segregation

  26. V. Emergence of civil rights movement (cont’d) • Legal assault on segregation • Main actors • League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC) • National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) • Leadership of Thurgood Marshall • Step-by-step strategy • Key steps (pre-Brown case) • LULAC: Méndez v. Westminster in California • NAACP • 1938 University of Missouri Law School case • 1950 University of Texas Law School case

  27. V. Emergence of civil rights movement (cont’d) • Legal assault on segregation • Brown v. Board of Education • Background • NAACP legal argument • Direct challenge to separate but equal doctrine • Emphasis on stigmatization, subversion of black self-esteem • Earl Warren’s desegregation decision • Import of decision • Limitations • Broader significance and impact

  28. V. Emergence of civil rights movement (cont’d) • Montgomery bus boycott • Rosa Parks • Activist past • Arrest on bus • Year-long black boycott of segregated buses • Supreme Court ruling against segregation in public transportation • Victory • Significance • Launching of nonviolent southern crusade for racial justice • Achievement of attention and support around country, world • Emergence of Martin Luther King, Jr.

  29. V. Emergence of civil rights movement (cont’d) • Language of freedom • Pervasiveness in movement • Range of meanings: social, political, economic • Leadership of King • Themes • Fusing of meanings of freedom • Merging of black cause and experience with those of nation • Capacity to reach both blacks and whites • Philosophies of nonviolence, civil disobedience, Christian love, forgiveness • Connections between struggles of African-Americans and non-whites overseas • Formation of Southern Christian Leadership Conference

  30. V. Emergence of civil rights movement (cont’d) • Southern white intransigence; “massive resistance” • Contributing factor: lack of federal backing • Supreme Court’s “all deliberate speed” ruling • Eisenhower’s ambivalence, reluctance to act • Forms • Southern Manifesto • Anti-desegregation laws • Banning of NAACP • Revival of Confederate flag • Little Rock crisis • Governor Orville Faubus’s obstruction of court-ordered integration • Eisenhower’s deployment of federal troops

  31. VI. Toward the Sixties • Election of 1960 • Republican nominee: Nixon • Democratic nominee: John F. Kennedy • Background • Choice of Lyndon B. Johnson as running mate • Catholic issue • Cold War outlook • “Missile gap” claim • Glamorous style • Nixon-Kennedy debate • Kennedy victory • Eisenhower’s farewell address; “military-industrial complex” • Social problems on horizon

  32. Map 96

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