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From Union Halls to the Suburbs : Americans for Democratic Action and the Transformation of Postwar Liberalism

Part of the Culture and Politics in the Cold War and Beyond series
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For decades, Americans for Democratic Action (ADA) exerted an outsized pull on the political stage.

Formed in 1947 by anticommunist liberals such as economist John Kenneth Galbraith and historian Arthur Schlesinger Jr., the ADA established itself as the most prominent liberal organization in the United States for more than a quarter century.

Shaped by the ADA, the New Politics movement upended Democratic Party politics with its challenge to the Vietnam War, demands for redistributive economic policies, and development of a far-reaching politics of race, gender, and sexuality. By bringing the ADA and its influential public intellectuals into the story of the New Politics movement, Scott Kamen reveals how American liberalism shifted away from the working-class concerns of the New Deal era and began to cater to the interests of a new, suburban professional class.

By the 1980s, many Democratic politicians, activists, and voters had embraced a neoliberal ideology that coupled socially liberal attitudes with market-based solutions, eschewing an older progressive politics steeped in labor issues.

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£28.95
Product Details
1625347618 / 9781625347619
Paperback / softback
31/01/2024
United States
300 pages, 13 illustrations
152 x 229 mm, 272 grams