An Affluent Society. The Post-War Midcentury

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Transcription:

An Affluent Society The Post-War Midcentury

World War II Strange bedfellows: Liberal western allies join forces with the Soviet Union to defeat Hitler s Axis A common foe/goal until the end of the war Carving up new spheres of influence; not traditional administrative imperialism, but ideological! US and Harry Truman: Strict ideological containment - no communist/soviet gains!

The Cold War The US vs. The USSR: Backing different regimes in Korea, Vietnam, and elsewhere Stalin and the hypocrisy of Soviet Marxism 1945: Orwell (Eric Arthur Blair) writes Animal Farm Soviet government = totalitarian, like fascism Orwell questions the end result. How would Marx feel about the Soviet system/life on the animal farm?

Age of Anxiety AND Prosperity Democratic party continues to provide presidential leadership with Harry S (his full middle name) Truman New Deal expansion runs into roadblocks, however - GI Bill, FHA, &c. get green lights or are expanded, but other policies, like universal healthcare, will have to wait and wait (Medicare and Medicaid with LBJ, ACA in 2010 ) And, not all policies are applied fairly by race (mortgage lending; redlining, for example, continues segregationist/discriminatory policy by de facto methods) Republicans trying to figure out how to compete: be conservative and try to roll back New Deal programs, or be moderate and continue with these popular ideas that people have come to rely upon?

An End of Ideology? Political scientist Daniel Bell observes an exhaustion of ideas in the postwar world, where vasty differing ideologies are outmoded or unnecessary as we adjust and advance to a point where we can agree on what we want and where we want to be By 1960, the presidential debates will end up being big agreement-fests where successful national candidates are moderate and agree on basic goals But is this an entirely accurate assessment?

Not-so-secret divides GOP is about to gradually go right-wing; while Dwight David Eisenhower is a moderate who embraces the liberal welfare state and peaceful international cooperation, there is a conservative wing of the party that wants to go backward, demolishing the New Deal Many GOP partisans embrace anti-communism (not so odd) and for a time tolerate McCarthyism (odd and bad) In 1964, they ll nominate loose canon Barry Goldwater for the Presidency; in the future, Rs will get a reputation as war hawks

Not-so-secret divides Goldwater in 1964 and Nixon in 1968, will end up using the racist Southern Strategy in their attempts to win the White House which will help complete the partisan realignment that has been in progress since FDR and culminates with LBJ s Great Society/Civil Rights policies In the 1970s and 1980s, they ll also court evangelical Christians The die is cast to openly revisit cultural rifts in the future, as the US becomes more diverse

Age of Prosperity In the postwar era, though, the US economy is booming and American political leadership is unparalleled worldwide the age of superpowers begins The US at the center of the reconstruction of European economies, providing loans via World Bank and the Bretton Woods System US $ as the benchmark value for International Monetary Fund (designed to stabilize currency), &c. That s good for us. Europe will catch back up (European Coal and Steel Community et al. > European Union), but US is reveling in the peacetime returns on wartime technology and industrial mobilization American private sector unions are at their zenith of power and membership in the mid 20th century

The Affluent Society As described in your textbook, economist John Kenneth Galbraith looks upon the rise in economic growth and the subsequent uptick in consumption with suspicion While average Americans are benefitting from this growth, he sees the increasingly materialistic desires of the populace being exploited by business after decades of depression and war Economic inequality is evening out, but how long will this classless prosperity last, as the private sector seeks to game consumers and workers, essentially deciding how Americans - and the free world - should live? And how classless is it to begin with, if not all demographics have full realization of their American rights? Women? Minorities, especially Black Americans?

The Affluent Society And there are dangers apparent While wealth was evening out, the poorest Americans were in some cases doing worse (Michael Harrington s The Other America, 1962) President Eisenhower warns against the economy s dependence on the defense industry for growth. The Military Industrial Complex has economic power that could translate into political power - war means $$ $ for this industry! By 1961, 3.5m Americans work in the defense industry The Cold War arms race and space race means government spending on defense and defense-adjacent technology (SPACE!) is on the rise

Vice President Richard Nixon on the American Standard of Living (1959) A US-Russia exhibit swap showing typical lifestyles of Americans and Soviets The American exhibit in Moscow looks amazing, but some Russians wonder if it really reflects a majority of Americans lifestyles Kitchen Debate between Premier Khruschev and VP Nixon

Vice President Richard Nixon on the American Standard of Living (1959) What criticism/questions did Russians have about the American exhibit in Moscow? Why did they doubt the claims presented by the Americans? What information did Nixon provide to back up claims about the American way of life presented at the exhibit? What US policies and economic realities bolstered his claims?

Nixon s Responses The living spaces are typical of many wage earning Americans - unionized workers, not wealthy professionals Capitalism, with welfare state safeties, can protect and promote wage-earners interests Of 44m families in the US, 25m live in places with as much or more space than these exhibits! 31m families own their own homes Americans own 56m cars, 50m TVs, 143m radios, and buy a family average of 9 dresses/suits and 14 pairs of shoes per year In recent recessions, the average length of unemployment is just a few months, and you get unemployment benefits during this period

Vice President Richard Nixon on the American Standard of Living (1959) Nixon quotes the first GOP president: We do not propose any war upon capital; we do wish to allow the humblest man an equal chance to get rich with everyone else. We do have inequality - we are trying to fix it Unemployment insurance and social security help us protect those who become vulnerable due to economic downturns, age, disability We are working to promote racial justice Labor strikes show that rights of collective bargaining are alive, well, and protected by our laws

Age of Prosperity The 1950s and 1960s as an age of mass media built upon the technological advancements made during and after the war Television becomes ubiquitous in prosperous postwar middle class homes, and it s a great tool Information/news Education/art Entertainment Marketing Walt Disney pulls all the threads together in his TV series, starting with Disneyland in 1955

Disneyland Goes to the World s Fair Using different products to cross market: TV for theme park, theme park for TV and so on The World s Fair Movement Undergirds the modern theme park, which begins with Disneyland Combination of diplomacy, cultural showcase, and industrial showcase idea first developed by Prince Albert with the Great Exhibition of 1851

Disneyland Goes to the World s Fair Like the 1959 US home exhibit in Russia, world s fairs are about showing the best that classical liberalism and industrialized economies ( capitalism ) have to offer society 1964-65 World s Fair at Flushing Meadows, Queens: Peace through understanding Theme quotation derived from an Eisenhower speech on education Age of Optimism diplomacy Sentiment: liberalism is good for the world; American liberalism works especially well Pre-Vietnam escalation: re-evalution of American policy is coming, but not for a bit!

The Unisphere! Built by US Steel, this shining globe was the the theme structure for the fair and remains an iconic emblem of Corona Park, Queens, NYC, and midcentury optimism!

New York State Pavilion observation towers Ever see Men in Black? ;)

VR #6 How is this TV show a good example of the culture and values of the affluent society of the postwar era in America? How do the products and innovations showcased illustrate the points made by Richard Nixon in his 1959 Kitchen Debate statements? How is the New York World s Fair, and the vision of America and the world presented by Disney in this TV show, a fair assessment of reality in 1964? What American realities does it not seem to delve into very much?