000 03271cam a2200373 i 4500
001 ocm1141949127
003 OCoLC
005 20220308104918.0
008 200220s2020 pau b 001 0 eng
010 _a2020006499
020 _a0812252764
_qhardcover
020 _a9780812252767
_qhardcover
035 _a(OCoLC)1141949127
040 _aPU/DLC
_beng
_erda
_cDLC
_dOCLCO
_dYDX
_dOCLCF
_dOCLCO
_dZGD
_dYDX
_dUtOrBLW
_dMiTN
042 _apcc
043 _an-us---
050 0 0 _aE183
_b.C877 2020
082 0 0 _a320.56/620973
_223
100 1 _aCritchlow, Donald T.,
_d1948-
245 1 0 _aIn defense of populism :
_bprotest and American democracy /
_cDonald T. Critchlow.
264 1 _aPhiladelphia :
_bUniversity of Pennsylvania Press,
_c[2020]
300 _a220 pages ;
_c24 cm.
336 _atext
_btxt
_2rdacontent.
337 _aunmediated
_bn
_2rdamedia.
338 _avolume
_bnc
_2rdacarrier.
504 _aIncludes bibliographical references and index.
505 0 _aIntroduction: Social Protest and Democracy -- Chapter 1. Populism: Prelude to "Big Government" -- Chapter 2. New Deal Protest and the Administrative State -- Chapter 3. How Grassroots Mobilization Changed Postwar Civil Rights -- Chapter 4. Second-Wave Feminism, Social Protest, and the Rights Revolution -- Chapter 5. The Populist Right: Anti-Statism and Anti-Elitism -- Chapter 6. Protest in a Polarized Age -- Notes -- Acknowledgments.
520 _a"In Defense of Populism challenges didactic accounts of populism as either simply expressions of the oppressed demanding that the democratic dream be realized or anxiety-ridden, anti-intellectual, paranoid, anti-democratic reactions to a changing order. Instead, this book submits that grassroots activist movements-populist movements-are essential to American democracy. At decisive points in American politics, social protest movements-whether on the left or the right-force established parties and leaders to bow to reform. In this way, anti-elitist social protest becomes absorbed by established powers. At the same time, the demands for democratic reform become institutionalized in the modern American state, ironically creating an enlarged bureaucratic government that is further removed from the people. This progression from protest to political absorption to institutionalization is evidenced in critical episodes in the American reform tradition. Indeed, American history is replete with these cycles of political disequilibrium followed by stabilization. In arguing for the necessary importance of populism to political reform, this book explores specific episodes in modern American history that reveal the interplay of populist social action and party reform: agrarian populism in the late nineteenth century, anti-corporatism in the Progressive Era, class protest during the New Deal, the struggle for black equality in the early Cold War era, second-wave feminism in the 1970s, and anti-statist New Right protest in the late twentieth century. "--
_cProvided by publisher.
650 0 _aDemocracy
_zUnited States
_xHistory.
650 0 _aPopulism
_zUnited States
_xHistory.
650 0 _aSocial movements
_zUnited States
_xHistory.
651 0 _aUnited States
_xPolitics and government.
655 7 _aHistory.
_2fast
999 _c506611
_d506611