Beyond the New Deal: Harry S. Truman and American liberalism (Contemporary American history series)
معرفی کتاب «Beyond the New Deal: Harry S. Truman and American liberalism (Contemporary American history series)» نوشتهٔ [by] Alonzo L. Hamby، منتشرشده توسط نشر Columbia University Press در سال 1973. این کتاب در فرمت pdf، زبان انگلیسی ارائه شده است.
"The country and the world doesn't deserve to be left this way," was David E. Lilienthal's reaction to the news of the death of Franklin D. Roosevelt and the prospect of the leadership of liberalism in America passing into the hands of the unknown Harry S. Truman. This book takes a fresh look at the tense and difficult relationship between Truman and the liberal intellectuals. Alonzo L. Hamby discusses changing styes and viewpoints in progressivism and examines the manifestations of that political philosophy as they appeared during the postwar years. He depicts the rise of non-Communist liberalism after the war as both a moral and a practical necessity. The concept of a Popular Front with Communism, predominant during the war years, was salutary so long as the major threat to liberal values was fascist militarism, but as a matter of both moral integrity and political necessity, the postwar era required a definition of progressivism which rejected all varieties of totalitarianism. Professor Hamby argues that the new persuasion, the Vial Center, was in the main a healthy reaffirmation of the progressive tradition. Harry S. Truman never won full acceptance from a liberal movement unable to overcome entirely its need for the type of charismatic leadership given it by Franklin D. Roosevelt. Nevertheless, he successfully defended the New Deal, making t a part of the American political consensus; he and his administration successfully adjusted the depression-born New Deal tradition to post-war affluence; and he recognized the black minority's drive for civil rights as one of the urgencies of American life. Operating in a hostile political climate, Truman scored only modest successes, but his leadership of the liberal movement was more consistent and effective than ,many liberals of the time or historians since have acknowledged. "The country and the world doesn't deserve to be left this way," was David E. Lilienthal's reaction to the news of the death of Franklin D. Roosevelt and the prospect of the leadership of liberalism in America passing into the hands of the unknown Harry S. Truman. This book takes a fresh look at the tense and difficult relationship between Truman and the liberal intellectuals. Alonzo L. Hamby discusses changing styes and viewpoints in progressivism and examines the manifestations of that political philosophy as they appeared during the postwar years. He depicts the rise of non-Communist liberalism after the war as both a moral and a practical necessity. The concept of a Popular Front with Communism, predominant during the war years, was salutary so long as the major threat to liberal values was fascist militarism, but as a matter of both moral integrity and political necessity, the postwar era required a definition of progressivism which rejected all varieties of totalitarianism. Professor Hamby argues that the new persuasion, the Vial Center, was in the main a healthy reaffirmation of the progressive tradition. Harry S. Truman never won full acceptance from a liberal movement unable to overcome entirely its need for the type of charismatic leadership given it by Franklin D. Roosevelt. Nevertheless, he successfully defended the New Deal, making it a part of the American political consensus; he and his administration successfully adjusted the depression-born New Deal tradition to post-war affluence; and he recognized the black minority's drive for civil rights as one of the urgencies of American life. Operating in a hostile political climate, Truman scored only modest successes, but his leadership of the liberal movement was more consistent and effective than many liberals of the time or historians since have acknowledged. Part One: The Quest For Identity And The Struggle Against Normalcy -- Sixty Million Jobs And The People's Revolution -- Wallace, Truman, The Liberals, And The Politics Of World War Ii -- Truman, The Liberals, And The Politics Of Alienation -- Truman, The Liberals, And The Origins Of The Cold War -- Demoralization And Defeat -- The Polarization Of The Liberal Movement -- The Politics And Diplomacy Of Containment -- Toward A Gideon's Army -- Truman And The Liberal Quest For Leadershiop -- Campaign For Liberalism -- The Quest For Identity And The Struggle Against Normalcy Part Two: The Fair Deal And The Vital Center -- The Vital Center -- The Political Economey Of The Fair Deal -- The Fair Deal: The Anatomy Of Stalemate -- The Fair Deal: Promise And Performance -- Truman, The Vital Center, And American Foreign Policy -- The Vital Center And The Politics Of Anti-cimmunism -- Korea And The Politics Of Semiwar -- The Diplomacy Of Stalemate -- Political Pitfalls: The Political Economy Of Mobilization -- Political Pitfalls: Corruption And Communism -- Last Hurrahs And New Tomorrows -- Beyond The New Deal: Truman, The Liberals, And The Politics Of Leadership. [by] Alonzo L. Hamby. Bibliography: P. [599]-605.
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