Copies:
Available:*
Library | Material Type | Item Barcode | Call Number | Shelf Location | Status | Item Holds |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Searching... | eBook | ER181869 | HB501 .A57 2006 | Electronic Resources | Searching... | Searching... |
On Order
Summary
Summary
At the dawn of the twenty-first century, the legitimacy of American capitalism seems unchallenged. The link between open markets, economic growth, and democratic success has become common wisdom, not only among policy makers but for many intellectuals as well. In this instance, however, the past has hardly been prologue to contemporary confidence in the free market. American Capitalism presents thirteen thought-provoking essays that explain how a variety of individuals, many prominent intellectuals but others partisans in the combative world of business and policy, engaged with anxieties about the seismic economic changes in postwar America and, in the process, reconfigured the early twentieth-century ideology that put critique of economic power and privilege at its center.
The essays consider a broad spectrum of figures--from C. L. R. James and John Kenneth Galbraith to Peter Drucker and Ayn Rand--and topics ranging from theories of Cold War "convergence" to the rise of the philanthropic Right. They examine how the shift away from political economy at midcentury paved the way for the 1960s and the "culture wars" that followed. Contributors interrogate what was lost and gained when intellectuals moved their focus from political economy to cultural criticism. The volume thereby offers a blueprint for a dramatic reevaluation of how we should think about the trajectory of American intellectual history in twentieth-century United States.
Table of Contents
Introduction: Social Theory and Capitalist Reality in the American Century |
Part I Theorizing Twentieth-Century American Capitalism |
1 The Postcapitalist Vision in Twentieth-Century American Social ThoughtHoward Brick |
2 To Moscow and Back: American Social Scientists and the Concept of ConvergenceDavid C. Engerman |
Part II Liberalism And Its Social Agenda |
3 Clark Kerr: From the Industrial to the Knowledge EconomyPaddy Riley |
4 John Kenneth Galbraith: Liberalism and the Politics of Cultural CritiqueKevin Mattson |
5 The Prophet of Post-Fordism: Peter Drucker and the Legitimation of the CorporationNils Gilman |
Part III A Critique From The Left |
6 C. Wright Mills and American Social ScienceDaniel Geary |
7 C. L. R. James and the Theory of State CapitalismChristopher Phelps |
8 Oliver C. Cox and the Roots of World Systems TheoryChristopher A. McAuley |
9 Feminism, Women's History, and American Social Thought at MidcenturyDaniel Horowitz |
Part IV The Rise Of The Right |
10 The Road Less Traveled: Reconsidering the Political Writings of Friedrich von HayekJuliet Williams |
11 The Politics of Rich and Rich: Postwar Investigations of Foundations and the Rise of the Philanthropic RightAlice O'Connor |
12 American Counterrevolutionary: Lemuel Ricketts Boulware and General Electric, 1950-1960Kimberly Phillips-Fein |
13 Godless Capitalism: Ayn Rand and the Conservative MovementJennifer Burns |
Notes |
Contributors |
Index |
Acknowledgments |