Utvidet returrett til 31. januar 2025

Bøker i Politics and Culture in Modern America-serien

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  • - Metropolitan Pittsburgh and the Fate of Industrial America
    av Allen Dieterich-Ward
    370,-

    Beyond Rust is among the first books of its kind to continue past the collapse of American manufacturing in the 1980s by exploring the diverse ways residents of an iconic industrial region sought places for themselves within a new economic order.

  • - The Moynihan Report and Its Legacy
    av Daniel Geary
    370,-

    The definitive history of the Moynihan Report controversy, Beyond Civil Rights examines the cultural assumptions embedded in the report's analysis of "the Negro family" and demonstrates its significance for liberals, conservatives, neoconservatives, civil rights leaders, Black Power activists, and feminists.

  • - Phoenix and the Transformation of American Politics
    av Elizabeth Tandy Shermer
    410,-

    Historian Elizabeth Tandy Shermer examines how Barry Goldwater and elite Phoenix businessmen used policy and federal funds to fashion a postwar "business climate," setting off an interstate competition for investment that transformed American politics.

  • - Marcus Foster and the Troubled History of American School Reform
    av John P. Spencer
    384,-

    In the Crossfire brings a much-needed historical perspective to contemporary debates about educational inequality by tracing the life and work of Marcus Foster, an African American educator who struggled to reform urban schools in the 1960s and early 1970s.

  • - The Evangelical Left in an Age of Conservatism
    av David R. Swartz
    401,-

    Moral Minority charts the rise and fall of the evangelical left, a movement ignored by the Democratic Party in the 1970s and alienated by the Republican Party in the 1980s-but whose activism pointed broader evangelicalism toward social justice.

  • - The Politics of Space, Place, and Region
     
    410,-

    This volume examines patterns of growth, government organization, and cultural representation that created a new region across the nation's southern rim following World War II. Essays explain how ideology and political economy restructured space within the Sunbelt, making the landscape and lives of its inhabitants more uniformly metropolitan.

  • - The Welfare State, Tax Politics, and the Limits of American Liberalism
    av Molly C. Michelmore
    318,-

    Analyzing economic policy from the New Deal through the Reagan Revolution, Tax and Spend takes a new look at the so-called tax-and-spend liberals of the past. This important study examines why many Americans have come to hate the government but continue to demand the security it provides.

  • - Evangelical Missions and the Problem of Race in the Nineteenth Century
    av Derek Chang
    331,-

    Derek Chang chronicles the American Baptist Home Mission Society's efforts to evangelize among African Americans in the South and Chinese migrants on the Pacific Coast during the late nineteenth century. He brings together for the first time African American and Chinese American religious histories in an innovative comparative approach.

  • av Steven P. Miller
    370,-

    Billy Graham and the Rise of the Republican South considers the critical role the famous evangelist played in creating the modern American South. Author Steven P. Miller treats Graham as a serious actor and a powerful transitional symbol-an evangelist, first and foremost, but also a profoundly political figure.

  • - Egalitarianism and Protest
    av Marian Mollin
    658,-

    Radical Pacifism in Modern America illuminates the complex relationships between gender, race, activism, and political culture, identifying critical factors that simultaneously hindered and facilitated grassroots efforts at social and political change.

  • - The Left-Liberal Tradition in America
    av Doug Rossinow
    370,-

    Rossinow revisits the period between the 1880s and the 1940s, when reformers and radicals worked together along a middle path between the revolutionary left and establishment liberalism. He takes the story up to the present, showing how the progressive connection was lost and explaining the consequences that followed.

  • av Edward J. Blum
    368,-

    W. E. B. Du Bois, American Prophet is the first religious biography of this leading civil rights activist and intellectual. Though Du Bois is often labeled an atheist, historian Edward J. Blum argues that his religious and spiritual insights are central to understanding his political and intellectual work.

  • - Politics, Ideology, and Imagination
     
    410,-

    This collection of essays by leading American historians explains how and why the fight against unionism has long been central to the meaning of contemporary conservatism.

  • - Disability Politics in World War II America
    av Audra Jennings
    770,-

    Drawing from extensive archival research, Out of the Horrors of War demonstrates that disabled citizens in the World War II era organized a national movement for economic security and full citizenship, reshaping the U.S. welfare state and laying the foundation for the disability rights movement.

  • - Chicago and the Rise of Gay Politics
    av Timothy Stewart-Winter
    370 - 1 252,-

    Queer Clout weaves together activism and electoral politics to trace the gay movement's path since the 1950s in Chicago. Stewart-Winter stresses gay people's and African Americans' shared focus on police harassment, highlighting how black political leaders enabled white gays and lesbians to join an emerging liberal coalition in city hall.

  • - The New York Riots of 1964 and the War on Crime
    av Michael W. Flamm
    368 - 1 189,-

    In Central Harlem, the symbolic and historic heart of black America, the violent unrest of July 1964 highlighted a new dynamic in the racial politics of the nation. The first "long, hot summer" of the Sixties had arrived.

  • av Seth Dowland
    316 - 1 084,-

    Family Values and the Rise of the Christian Right chronicles how the family values agenda became so powerful in American political life and why it appealed to conservative evangelical Christians.

  • - Civil Rights and Black Power in Philadelphia
    av Matthew J. Countryman
    454,-

    Up South documents the efforts of Philadelphia's Black Power activists to construct a vital and effective social movement combining analyses of racism with a program of grassroots community organizing in the context of the failure of civil rights liberalism to deliver on its promise of racial equality.

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