Children of the Silent Majority (e-bog) af Blumenthal, Seth
Blumenthal, Seth (forfatter)

Children of the Silent Majority e-bog

253,01 DKK (inkl. moms 316,26 DKK)
Only fifteen years before his 1980 campaign, Ronald Reagan blasted students on Californias campuses as malcontents, beatniks, and filthy speech advocates. But it was just a few years later that Hunter S. Thompson, citing that maddening FOUR MORE YEARS! chant from the Nixon Youth gallery in the convention hall, heard the voices of those beatniks coevals who would become some of Reagans staunches...
E-bog 253,01 DKK
Forfattere Blumenthal, Seth (forfatter)
Udgivet 26 oktober 2018
Længde 360 sider
Genrer 1KBB
Sprog English
Format epub
Beskyttelse LCP
ISBN 9780700627028
Only fifteen years before his 1980 campaign, Ronald Reagan blasted students on Californias campuses as malcontents, beatniks, and filthy speech advocates. But it was just a few years later that Hunter S. Thompson, citing that maddening FOUR MORE YEARS! chant from the Nixon Youth gallery in the convention hall, heard the voices of those beatniks coevals who would become some of Reagans staunchest supporters. It is this cadre of young conservatives, more muted in the histories than the so-called Silent Majority, that this book brings to the fore.In Children of the Silent Majority Seth Blumenthal explains how, under Nixon, the Republican Party built its majority after 1968 with a forward-thinking, innovative appeal to young voters and leaders. Describing a complex network of influence, Blumenthal examines the role of youth in courting white ethnic, urban voters and, in turn, the role of race and education in the GOPs targeted approach to young voters. He also considers the prominence of young moderate Republicans in the Nixon presidency as well as the importance of young voters in shaping Nixons policies on marijuana, the environment, and the draft. While pollsters, pundits, and politicians of the time expected youth to lean left, Nixons surprising effort established a model for a youth campaign that successfully shaped GOP strategy and operations throughout the 1980s. Identifying and defining that effort, Children of the Silent Majority captures a turning point in partisan politics and Republican fortunes and examines a critical moment in the growing importance of image in modern politics. The book suggests a new way of appraising and understanding the significance of young voters in elections and in American political life.