A Troubled Feast: American Society Since 1945

Front Cover
Little, Brown, 1979 - Social Science - 302 pages
William E. Leuchtenburg, Columbia University. Quoted from the author's Preface: [A Troubled Feast] seeks to fill a large gap in courses in the history of the United States by providing the first account of the national experience from 1945 to the present day [1973]. Quoted from Back Cover--The Essence of this book is suggested by its title. The "troubled" aspects may well be the more familiar--the frightful assassinations of public men, the malignant effects of two Asian wars, the endemic violence, the persistence of social ills. Acknowledgment of the reality of the "feast"-that is, the widespread affluence made possible by the prodigious expansion of the economy-has often been more grudging. Yet in these years millions were lifted out of poverty, millions more into the ranks of the middle class. And it was the abundance that shaped many of the contours of American society in the nearly three decades since 1945, especially the consumer culture in its multifarious ramifications, and that exerted a decisive influence upon not only the troubles of this era but the too little noticed advances.

From inside the book

Contents

The Man from Missouri
11
Maps Charts and Tables
18
Affluent America
37
Copyright

23 other sections not shown

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (1979)

Born in Ridgewood (Queens), New York, William Leuchtenburg is currently William Rand Kenan, Jr. Professor of History at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He was educated at Cornell University and at Columbia University, from which he received his Ph.D. in 1951. After teaching briefly at Smith College and Harvard University, he began a 30-year tenure on the faculty at Columbia, where he became De Witt Clinton Professor of American History in 1971. He has served as president of the Organization of American Historians, the Society of American Historians, and most recently (1991) the American Historical Association. He has also been Harmsworth Professor at Oxford University. Leuchtenburg is an expert on twentieth-century U.S. political history, especially the era of the New Deal. His book Franklin D. Roosevelt and the New Deal, 1932--1940 (1963) won both the Bancroft and Parkman prizes.

Bibliographic information