The Crisis of the Old Order, 1919-1933Houghton Mifflin, 1988 - 557 páginas The Crisis of the Old Order, 1919-1933, volume one of Pulitzer Prize-winning historian and biographer Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr. s Age of Roosevelt series, is the first of three books that interpret the political, economic, social, and intellectual history of the early twentieth century in terms of Franklin D. Roosevelt, the spokesman and symbol of the period. Portraying the United States from the Great War to the Great Depression, The Crisis of the Old Order covers the Jazz Age and the rise and fall of the cult of business. For a season, prosperity seemed permanent, but the illusion came to an end when Wall Street crashed in October 1929. Public trust in the wisdom of business leadership crashed too. With a dramatist s eye for vivid detail and a scholar s respect for accuracy, Schlesinger brings to life the era that gave rise to FDR and his New Deal and changed the public face of the United States forever." |
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Página 139
... sense or another , could be realized on earth . As these traditions had prepared people for the planning idea , so in the twenties Dewey and Croly instilled specific confidence in the power of man to plan , Veblen asserted the technical ...
... sense or another , could be realized on earth . As these traditions had prepared people for the planning idea , so in the twenties Dewey and Croly instilled specific confidence in the power of man to plan , Veblen asserted the technical ...
Página 197
... sense of reality . For Tugwell's doctrine was always — nearly always — re- deemed by his deepest commitment , which was to experimentalism as a social method . He distrusted sacred dogmas and ultimate ends . When Professor George S ...
... sense of reality . For Tugwell's doctrine was always — nearly always — re- deemed by his deepest commitment , which was to experimentalism as a social method . He distrusted sacred dogmas and ultimate ends . When Professor George S ...
Página 205
... sense , at once depress- ing and exhilarating , that capitalism itself was finished . Some felt it dumbly on the breadlines or in the piny woods ; but intellectuals , denied by the materialism of the twenties a sense of function in ...
... sense , at once depress- ing and exhilarating , that capitalism itself was finished . Some felt it dumbly on the breadlines or in the piny woods ; but intellectuals , denied by the materialism of the twenties a sense of function in ...
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The Crisis Of 1919–1933: The Age of Roosevelt, Volume I Arthur M. Schlesinger Vista previa limitada - 2003 |
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