The Struggle for America's Promise: Equal Opportunity at the Dawn of Corporate Capital

Author:   Claire Goldstene
Publisher:   University Press of Mississippi
ISBN:  

9781628462449


Pages:   240
Publication Date:   30 November 2014
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

Our Price $92.40 Quantity:  
Add to Cart

Share |

The Struggle for America's Promise: Equal Opportunity at the Dawn of Corporate Capital


Add your own review!

Overview

Full Product Details

Author:   Claire Goldstene
Publisher:   University Press of Mississippi
Imprint:   University Press of Mississippi
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.389kg
ISBN:  

9781628462449


ISBN 10:   1628462442
Pages:   240
Publication Date:   30 November 2014
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

Table of Contents

Reviews

An extremely well written work that gives students a handy grip on the variety of experiences in the Gilded Age. Claire Goldstene's terse yet comprehensive new book is a breathtaking balancing act of depth and breadth. Her ingeniously focused chapters spotlight captivating historical figures--Booker T. Washington, Terrence Powderly, Emma Goldman, Samuel Gompers, Edward Bellamy--who cover the waterfront of positions in the often violent struggles that defined the era. She also spotlights organizations that lacked singular leadership. These include: the National Civic Federation, whose members included the era's most famous business, academic, and political leaders, which unblushingly defended monopoly from the evils of 'excessive' business competition; and the People's Party, which dominated state governments in much of the Midwest and South in the early 1890s, and worked, in league with many labor unions against big banks and railroads, in defense of private property and rural, middle-class individualism. Goldstene finds a riveting central theme--equal opportunity--in the propaganda of all parties to the multi-sided conflict. Many students take the ideal of equal opportunity to be self-evidently laudable and uncontroversial, as a modern American article of faith today. But Goldstene makes them see that there have always been many attractive, yet conflicting, ways to define that ideal. She also makes them see that at the dawn of the industrial age, equal opportunity was something people had to fight for, against bitter opposition. Together, her focused chapters make the era manageable for today's harried and often underprepared undergraduates--yet still intellectually stimulating and complex enough to keep the best of them awake and challenged. Goldstene pries, incisively, into the heart of catastrophic developments and upheavals that created a political order that frightens so many students today, with its shrinking opportunities for steady work, and humane retirement options for their folks. Her research is as wide and up to date as anybody in the profession today. With a master storyteller's skills of characterization and an eagle eye for vivid, illuminating quotations, she captures the widest range of experience. She manages, in the manner of Homer, Virgil, and Dante, as much as the greatest social historians of modern times, to tell a thrilling story of dramatic human conflict without oversimplification or partisanship. --David L. Chappell, Rothbaum Professor of Modern U.S. History, University of Oklahoma, and author of Waking from the Dream: The Struggle for Civil Rights in the Shadow of Martin Luther King What could be timelier than a historical study of the ideology of equal opportunity and the growth of inequality in the United States? Set in the Gilded Age, an era when the contradictions in the claims about equal opportunity were becoming impossible to ignore, The Struggle for America's Promise illuminates the ways in which a range of public figures responded by engaging, criticizing, and re-working the notion of equal opportunity. Claire Goldstene unflinchingly scrutinizes the implicit under side of this ideology--inequality of outcomes--and the quandary this posed both for those seeking to justify the new economic order and for those committed to greater social justice. This book should become required reading for every history student in America. --Barbara Weinstein, New York University The Struggle for America's Promise provides an excellent overview of the main strands of thought which pursued the achievement of 'equal opportunity' during the Gilded Age. It brings together the intellectual contributions of a number of key figures within the social and economic context of the Gilded Age, with its tragic and disruptive inequalities. Goldstene portrays individuals and movements struggling to 'make sense' of an economy which no longer 'made sense' by older ways of thought. Scholars in the fields of labor history, American studies, intellectual history, and US social and economic history will all find food for thought here. --Ilene A. DeVault, Cornell University


An extremely well written work that gives students a handy grip on the variety of experiences in the Gilded Age. Claire Goldstene's terse yet comprehensive new book is a breathtaking balancing act of depth and breadth. Her ingeniously focused chapters spotlight captivating historical figures--Booker T. Washington, Terrence Powderly, Emma Goldman, Samuel Gompers, Edward Bellamy--who cover the waterfront of positions in the often violent struggles that defined the era. She also spotlights organizations that lacked singular leadership. These include: the National Civic Federation, whose members included the era's most famous business, academic, and political leaders, which unblushingly defended monopoly from the evils of 'excessive' business competition; and the People's Party, which dominated state governments in much of the Midwest and South in the early 1890s, and worked, in league with many labor unions against big banks and railroads, in defense of private property and rural, middle-class individualism. Goldstene finds a riveting central theme--equal opportunity--in the propaganda of all parties to the multi-sided conflict. Many students take the ideal of equal opportunity to be self-evidently laudable and uncontroversial, as a modern American article of faith today. But Goldstene makes them see that there have always been many attractive, yet conflicting, ways to define that ideal. She also makes them see that at the dawn of the industrial age, equal opportunity was something people had to fight for, against bitter opposition. Together, her focused chapters make the era manageable for today's harried and often underprepared undergraduates--yet still intellectually stimulating and complex enough to keep the best of them awake and challenged. Goldstene pries, incisively, into the heart of catastrophic developments and upheavals that created a political order that frightens so many students today, with its shrinking opportunities for steady work, and humane retirement options for their folks. Her research is as wide and up to date as anybody in the profession today. With a master storyteller's skills of characterization and an eagle eye for vivid, illuminating quotations, she captures the widest range of experience. She manages, in the manner of Homer, Virgil, and Dante, as much as the greatest social historians of modern times, to tell a thrilling story of dramatic human conflict without oversimplification or partisanship. --David L. Chappell, Rothbaum Professor of Modern U.S. History, University of Oklahoma, and author of Waking from the Dream: The Struggle for Civil Rights in the Shadow of Martin Luther King What could be timelier than a historical study of the ideology of equal opportunity and the growth of inequality in the United States? Set in the Gilded Age, an era when the contradictions in the claims about equal opportunity were becoming impossible to ignore, The Struggle for America's Promise illuminates the ways in which a range of public figures responded by engaging, criticizing, and re-working the notion of equal opportunity. Claire Goldstene unflinchingly scrutinizes the implicit under side of this ideology--inequality of outcomes--and the quandary this posed both for those seeking to justify the new economic order and for those committed to greater social justice. This book should become required reading for every history student in America. --Barbara Weinstein, New York University The Struggle for America's Promise provides an excellent overview of the main strands of thought which pursued the achievement of 'equal opportunity' during the Gilded Age. It brings together the intellectual contributions of a number of key figures within the social and economic context of the Gilded Age, with its tragic and disruptive inequalities. Goldstene portrays individuals and movements struggling to 'make sense' of an economy which no longer 'made sense' by older ways of thought. Scholars in the fields of labor history, American studies, intellectual history, and US social and economic history will all find food for thought here. --Ilene A. DeVault, Cornell University �An extremely well written work that gives students a handy grip on the variety of experiences in the Gilded Age. Claire Goldstene�s terse yet comprehensive new book is a breathtaking balancing act of depth and breadth. Her ingeniously focused chapters spotlight captivating historical figures�Booker T. Washington, Terrence Powderly, Emma Goldman, Samuel Gompers, Edward Bellamy�who cover the waterfront of positions in the often violent struggles that defined the era. She also spotlights organizations that lacked singular leadership. These include: the National Civic Federation, whose members included the era�s most famous business, academic, and political leaders, which unblushingly defended monopoly from the evils of �excessive� business competition; and the People�s Party, which dominated state governments in much of the Midwest and South in the early 1890s, and worked, in league with many labor unions against big banks and railroads, in defense of private property and rural, middle-class individualism. Goldstene finds a riveting central theme�equal opportunity�in the propaganda of all parties to the multi-sided conflict. Many students take the ideal of equal opportunity to be self-evidently laudable and uncontroversial, as a modern American article of faith today. But Goldstene makes them see that there have always been many attractive, yet conflicting, ways to define that ideal. She also makes them see that at the dawn of the industrial age, equal opportunity was something people had to fight for, against bitter opposition. Together, her focused chapters make the era manageable for today�s harried and often underprepared undergraduates�yet still intellectually stimulating and complex enough to keep the best of them awake and challenged. Goldstene pries, incisively, into the heart of catastrophic developments and upheavals that created a political order that frightens so many students today, with its shrinking opportunities for steady work, and humane retirement options for their folks. Her research is as wide and up to date as anybody in the profession today. With a master storyteller�s skills of characterization and an eagle eye for vivid, illuminating quotations, she captures the widest range of experience. She manages, in the manner of Homer, Virgil, and Dante, as much as the greatest social historians of modern times, to tell a thrilling story of dramatic human conflict without oversimplification or partisanship.��David L. Chappell, Rothbaum Professor of Modern U.S. History, University of Oklahoma, and author of Waking from the Dream: The Struggle for Civil Rights in the Shadow of Martin Luther King �What could be timelier than a historical study of the ideology of equal opportunity and the growth of inequality in the United States? Set in the Gilded Age, an era when the contradictions in the claims about equal opportunity were becoming impossible to ignore, The Struggle for America�s Promise illuminates the ways in which a range of public figures responded by engaging, criticizing, and re-working the notion of equal opportunity. Claire Goldstene unflinchingly scrutinizes the implicit under side of this ideology�inequality of outcomes�and the quandary this posed both for those seeking to justify the new economic order and for those committed to greater social justice. This book should become required reading for every history student in America.��Barbara Weinstein, New York University �The Struggle for America�s Promise provides an excellent overview of the main strands of thought which pursued the achievement of �equal opportunity� during the Gilded Age. It brings together the intellectual contributions of a number of key figures within the social and economic context of the Gilded Age, with its tragic and disruptive inequalities. Goldstene portrays individuals and movements struggling to �make sense� of an economy which no longer �made sense� by older ways of thought. Scholars in the fields of labor history, American studies, intellectual history, and US social and economic history will all find food for thought here.��Ilene A. DeVault, Cornell University


What could be timelier than a historical study of the ideology of equal opportunity and the growth of inequality in the United States? Set in the Gilded Age, an era when the contradictions in the claims about equal opportunity were becoming impossible to ignore, The Struggle for America's Promise illuminates the ways in which a range of public figures responded by engaging, criticizing, and re-working the notion of equal opportunity. Claire Goldstene unflinchingly scrutinizes the implicit under side of this ideology--inequality of outcomes--and the quandary this posed both for those seeking to justify the new economic order and for those committed to greater social justice. This book should become required reading for every history student in America. --Barbara Weinstein, New York University


Author Information

Claire Goldstene has taught United States history at the University of Maryland, the University of North Florida, and American University. Her work has been published in numerous journals including Thought and Action, Journal of Third-World Studies, and Southern Historian, among others.

Tab Content 6

Author Website:  

Customer Reviews

Recent Reviews

No review item found!

Add your own review!

Countries Available

All regions
Latest Reading Guide

Aorrng

Shopping Cart
Your cart is empty
Shopping cart
Mailing List