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The Cultural Left and the Reagan Era: U.S. Protest and Central American Revolution

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

The Cultural Left and the Reagan Era: U.S. Protest and Central American Revolution

Contributors:

By (Author) Nick Witham

ISBN:

9781784531966

Publisher:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Imprint:

I.B. Tauris

Publication Date:

24th June 2015

Country:

United Kingdom

Classifications

Readership:

Tertiary Education

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Revolutions, uprisings, rebellions

Dewey:

973.927

Prizes:

Long-listed for Winner of the 2016 British Association for American Studies Arthur Miller Centre Prize for Best First Book in American Studies 2016

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

256

Dimensions:

Width 138mm, Height 216mm

Weight:

440g

Description

The Reagan era is usually seen as an era of unheralded prosperity, and as a high-watermark of Republican success. President Ronald Reagan's belief in "Reaganomics", his media-friendly sound-bites and "can do" personality have come to define the era. However, this was also a time of domestic protest and unrest. Under Reagan the US was directly involved in the revolutions which were sweeping the Central Americas- El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala -and in Nicaragua Reagan armed the Contras who fought the Sandinistas. This book seeks to show how the left within the US reacted and protested against these events. The Nation, Verso Books and the Guardian exploded in popularity, riding high on the back of popular anti-interventionist sentiment in America, while the film-maker Oliver Stone led a group of directors making films with a radical left-wing message. The author shows how the1980s in America were a formative cultural period for the anti-Reaganites as well as the Reaganites, and in doing so charts a new history.

Reviews

'As one might expect from such an influential and controversial personality Ronald Regan has been the subject of much biography, running from the meticulous but essentially critical works of Lou Cannon to the bizarre biographical fantasy by Edmund Morris. Iwan Morgan's new life, benefiting from the elapse of time, the fading of old resentments and the appearance of rival subjects of both admiration and disdain, stands every chance of emerging as the standard life. Morgan has brought to its writing formidable but also thoughtful and critical research and a lively style. His research has given him a sure grasp of Reagan's improbable journey from small town Middle West, through Hollywood's Golden Age into national and international politics. Morgan's greatest virtue is his fairness. He does justice to Reagan's authentic faith in the essential virtue of America and to the individual, non-ideological quality of his conservative faith. At the same time he is not afraid to point out the contradictions in Reagan's beliefs, the limitations of his political credo and the occasional mistakes and absurdities of his political career. Wise, fair and witty, Iwan Morgan's life of Reagan is likely to be accepted by both the admirers and the critics of the fortieth president as both trustworthy and readable.' ---Godfrey Hodgson, author of The Myth of American Exceptionalism and former Washington correspondent for The Observer
'Iwan Morgan's Reagan is a fast-paced narrative that is superbly organized and judiciously argued about the life and times of America's 40th president. Before going elsewhere, both academics and general audiences should first read this exceptional volume as the introduction to this complex topic.'--- Irwin F. Gellman, author of The President and the Apprentice: Eisenhower and Nixon 1952-1961

Author Bio

Nick Witham is Senior Lecturer in American Social and Cultural History at Canterbury Christ Church University and the author of several articles on filmmakers, writers and left-wing politics in 1980s America

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