Identity, Social Justice, and the Polity: Family Values and the Neoliberal Turn
Thursday, May 31, 2012 @ 12:00pm
Event Info
Admission
Venue
800 S. Halsted
Chicago,
IL
60607
Presenter
Jane Addams Hull-House Museum
312-413-5353
This event will be recorded for WBEZ’s Chicago Amplified.
In the 1960s President Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society and War on Poverty promised an array of federal programs to assist millions of American families. In the 1980s President Ronald Reagan declared Republicans the party of traditional family values and promised to keep the federal government out of American lives. Again and again historians have sought to explain the nation's profound political realignment from the 1960s to the 2000s, four decades that witnessed the fracturing of liberalism and the rise of the conservative right. Robert O. Self's All in the Family: The Realignment of American Democracy since the 1960s is the first synthetic treatment to recognize that the many separate threads of that realignment—from civil rights to women’s rights, from the antiwar movement to the “silent majority,” from the abortion wars to gay marriage, from health care to welfare reform—all ran through the politicized modern American family.


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