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Deeply Divided
Doug McAdam
Karina Kloos
其他書名
Racial Politics and Social Movements in Post-War America
出版
Oxford University Press
, 2014-08-18
主題
Political Science / Political Process / Political Parties
Political Science / Political Process / General
Political Science / American Government / General
History / Social History
History / United States / General
History / Americas (North, Central, South, West Indies)
ISBN
0199937869
9780199937868
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=KbIiBAAAQBAJ&hl=&source=gbs_api
EBook
SAMPLE
註釋
By many measures--commonsensical or statistical--the United States has not been more divided politically or economically in the last hundred years than it is now. How have we gone from the striking bipartisan cooperation and relative economic equality of the war years and post-war period to the extreme inequality and savage partisan divisions of today? In this sweeping look at American politics from the Depression to the present, Doug McAdam and Karina Kloos argue that party politics alone is not responsible for the mess we find ourselves in. Instead, it was the ongoing interaction of social movements and parties that, over time, pushed Democrats and Republicans toward their ideological margins, undermining the post-war consensus in the process. The Civil Rights struggle and the white backlash it provoked reintroduced the centrifugal force of social movements into American politics, ushering in an especially active and sustained period of movement/party dynamism, culminating in today's tug of war between the Tea Party and Republican establishment for control of the GOP. In Deeply Divided, McAdam and Kloos depart from established explanations of the conservative turn in the United States and trace the roots of political polarization and economic inequality back to the shifting racial geography of American politics in the 1960s. Angered by Lyndon Johnson's more aggressive embrace of civil rights reform in 1964, Southern Dixiecrats abandoned the Democrats for the first time in history, setting in motion a sustained regional realignment that would, in time, serve as the electoral foundation for a resurgent and increasingly more conservative Republican Party.