Making Republicans Liberal


Social Struggle and the Politics of Compromise

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By Kristoffer Smemo
Imprint:
UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA PRESS
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Format:
HARDBACK
Dimensions:
229 x 152 mm
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Pages:
277

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Description

Kristoffer Smemo teaches Labor Studies at UCLA.

Contents Introduction. Making Republicans "Liberal" Part I. Integration Chapter 1. The Revolt of the City Chapter 2. Planning for the Little People's Century Chapter 3. Balance of Power Part II. Disintegration Chapter 4. The Big City Vote Chapter 5. Rebellion and Redevelopment Chapter 6. Paying for Liberalism Epilogue. From Integration to Disintegration Notes Index Acknowledgments

"Brilliantly weaving together high politics and social movements and moving seamlessly between national, state, and local arenas, Kristoffer Smemo's Making Republicans Liberal provides an authoritative account of the rise and fall of the mid-twentieth-century liberal Republicans while casting new light on a host of vital policy areas. A must-read for anyone interested in party politics in the twentieth-century United States." (Mason Williams, co-editor of Shaped by the State: Toward a New Political History of the Twentieth Century) "Looking back from a polarized present, midcentury liberal Republicans get remembered (if at all) as avatars of a more genteel politics. Kristoffer Smemo convincingly punctures that veneer, showing how northern liberal Republicans' politics of compromise depended on the power of the organized working class that they sought to accommodate. Smemo has the rare talent both to grasp the game of politics, and to put all the machinations in social context. The result is a triumph, a superb political history that speaks also to work in American political development and social movements." (Daniel Schlozman, author of When Movements Anchor Parties: Electoral Alignments in American History)

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