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“America in Transition”

“America in Transition”. Economic, Cultural and Social Change in the late Twentieth Century. I. A Changing People. A. An Aging Population. After 1970, lower birth rates and delayed marriages Median age of the U.S. population consequently grew

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“America in Transition”

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  1. “America in Transition” Economic, Cultural and Social Change in the late Twentieth Century

  2. I. A Changing People

  3. A. An Aging Population • After 1970, lower birth rates and delayed marriages • Median age of the U.S. population consequently grew • The “graying of America” has proven to be both a blessing and a burden

  4. B. The Rise of the Sunbelt • Between 1970-1990, 90% of the nation’s population growth came in the South and the West • 1980 Census: More people in the south and west than in the north and east

  5. B. The Rise of the Sunbelt (cont.) • Conservative, sunbelt coalition elects Reagan • South now has a 2-party system • Reasons for this demographic shift • The “Gunbelt” • Government spending in the space program also promoted Sunbelt growth

  6. C. New Immigration • After 1970, Asia and Latin America become the major source of U.S. immigrants • Dramatic increase in immigration after 1880 • Asian-Americans = fastest growing segment of the U.S. population • The Refugee Act of 1980

  7. C. New Immigration (cont.) • Immigrants clustered in a handful of states and cities • Rising conflict between old and new ethnic groups • Irony in the fact that new immigrants were often very industrious and successful • Increased Black-White tension • Disappearing sense of “American community”

  8. D. New Patterns of Urbanization • By 1990, a majority of Americans lived in cities of a million people or more • Suburbs melded into “urban corridors” • “Edge Cities” rival the central cities that gave them birth

  9. E. Changing Family Patterns • Number of women in the work force continued to grow • Women = better educated • Decline in the traditional 2-parent family unit • Many more people living alone—25% of U.S. households in 1990 • Problems for Black males

  10. II. Economic Transformations

  11. A. New Technologies • During the 1970’s, sales of home computers soared --Apple vs. IBM • Artificial Intelligence capabilities • An “Information Revolution” --E-mail, fax machines, voice mail, World Wide Web, cellular phones

  12. B. Big Business • Computerized communications transformed the way of doing business forever • Bank Cards, private debt and personal bankruptcies soared • The ATM revolution

  13. B. Big Business (cont.) • Franchising and chain stores change the way consumer products are bought and sold --Chili’s and Starbucks --Sam Walton and Wal-Mart • American chains expand overseas • International production

  14. B. Big Business (cont.) • Foreign interests buy U.S. companies • The “globalization” of industrial giants • After 1970, postindustrial restructuring became a fact of life • Union membership declines • “De-skilling” of the American labor force

  15. III. The Environment • The “Environmental Movement” --1st Earth Day (1970) • Congressional Action during the 1970’s --The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA—1970) • Environmentalism prompted heated public debate

  16. III. The Environment (cont.) • New standards brought some significant improvements • Creation of a cleanup “Superfund” • Reagan tries to reverse government environmentalism --Secretary of the Interior James Watt • Environmental debates lessens in the 1990’s

  17. III. The Environment (cont.) • Growing focus on international ecological dangers -- “global warming” • International meetings on environmental issues became frequent • Concerns over U.S. dependence on fossil fuels as an energy source

  18. III. The Environment (cont.) • Creation of the Department of Energy (1977) • The Perils of Nuclear power --Three Mile Island (1979) • Battles with OPEC over the cost of oil • Tapping new oil supplies and OPEC rivalries help

  19. IV. Media and Culture

  20. A. The Video Revolution • By the 1990’s, the video screen became the symbol of the nation’s mass culture • The omnipresence of the video monitor • 1970’s were the last decade of dominance by the 3 major television networks

  21. A. The Video Revolution (cont.) • Original strategy of offering general-interest programming to attract a mass audience • CBS jettisons this strategy in the 1970’s to attract viewers more likely to spend money on new products

  22. A. The Video Revolution (cont.) • CBS also used its comedy lineup to address more controversial programming -- “All in the Family” -- “Mary Tyler Moore Show” -- “M*A*S*H” -- “Saturday Night Live” (1975)

  23. A. The Video Revolution (cont.) • ABC begins to cultivate the teen audience during the 1970’s -- “Charlie’s Angels” -- “Three’s Company” -- “Kojak” -- “Happy Days” -- “Fantasy Island”

  24. A. The Video Revolution (cont.) • Rising Profits for the 3 major networks during the 1970’s • During the 1980’s, the major networks confronted a slow, steady loss of viewers -- “The Bill Cosby Show” -- “Cheers” • Independent stations begin to compete in local markets

  25. A. The Video Revolution (cont.) • Debut of the Fox Network (1988) -- “The Simpsons” • The impact of remote-control and the VCR • Cable television further fragments TV viewership --65% of U.S. homes wired for cable by 1995 --Ted Turner and CNN

  26. B. The Movies • Ticket prices for movies rise after 1970 • Hollywood focuses on producing a few blockbuster epics -- “Star Wars” (1977) -- “Rocky” (1976) • Many box office duds, too

  27. B. The Movies (cont.) • Because of the duds, Hollywood plays it safe with story lines and special effects that have worked in the past -- “Batman” and “Jurassic Park” (1993) • Video rental stores and multiplex suburban theaters in the 80’s & 90’s • MTV is launched in 1981

  28. C. The New Mass Culture Debate • Mass culture studies at U.S. universities during the 80’s & 90’s • Subculture creation by some shows • Controversy over university cultural studies -- The Closing of the American Mind (1987) -- “Politically Correct”

  29. C. The New Mass Culture Debate (cont.) • Studies show baby-boomers wanted stronger family and religious ties in the 80’s • Yet, they displayed more tolerance for cultural diversity • Controversy over the NEA and the NEH • The conservative attack on “secular humanism”

  30. V. Social Activism and Conservative Politics • Social ferment intensifies after the 1960’s • The importance of the mass demonstration -- “Million Man March” (1995) -- Promise Keepers march on Washington (1997) • Mass demonstrations fail to draw media attention

  31. V. Social Activism and Conservative Politics (cont.) • “Consciousness-raising” in the 1970’s • Growing concerns among women over economic self-sufficiency and equal pay • The “feminization” of poverty • Diversity in the women’s movement proves to be a strength

  32. V. Social Activism and Conservative Politics (cont.) • Sexual harassment becomes a contemporary issue --Anita Hill -- “Tailhook” convention (1991) • “Afrocentrism as a movement during the 1970’s

  33. V. Social Activism and Conservative Politics (cont.) • “Malcolmania” --Spike Lee • Racial pride in rap and hip-hop music • Reconciling Black pride with the American “melting pot” • NAACP debate over integration versus separate Black schools (1997)

  34. V. Social Activism and Conservative Politics (cont.) • Gap between Blacks and Whites continues to a greater degree than most would like to acknowledge --O.J. Simpson Murder Trial • Native Americans and gambling casinos

  35. V. Social Activism and Conservative Politics (cont.) • The media proclaimed the 1980’s the decade of the Hispanics • Enormous diversity within this designation • Diversity among Asian Americans • Quotas and the “Politics of Group Identity” -- “Affirmative Action”

  36. V. Social Activism and Conservative Politics (cont.) • Affirmative Action sparked tremendous controversy • The rise of racial and ethnic inter-marriage • The “New Right” with evangelical Christian roots --Pat Robertson’s 700 Club --Rush Limbaugh

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