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Pocketbook Politics: Economic Citizenship in Twentieth-Century America (Politics and Society in Modern America 48) Kindle Edition

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Management number 222072637 Release Date 2026/05/04 List Price US$10.67 Model Number 222072637
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"How much does it cost?" We think of this question as one that preoccupies the nation's shoppers, not its statesmen. But, as Pocketbook Politics dramatically shows, the twentieth-century American polity in fact developed in response to that very consumer concern. In this groundbreaking study, Meg Jacobs demonstrates how pocketbook politics provided the engine for American political conflict throughout the twentieth century. From Woodrow Wilson to Franklin Roosevelt to Richard Nixon, national politics turned on public anger over the high cost of living. Beginning with the explosion of prices at the turn of the century, every strike, demonstration, and boycott was, in effect, a protest against rising prices and inadequate income. On one side, a reform coalition of ordinary Americans, mass retailers, and national politicians fought for laws and policies that promoted militant unionism, government price controls, and a Keynesian program of full employment. On the other, small businessmen fiercely resisted this low-price, high-wage agenda that threatened to bankrupt them. This book recaptures this dramatic struggle, beginning with the immigrant Jewish, Irish, and Italian women who flocked to Edward Filene's famous Boston bargain basement that opened in 1909 and ending with the Great Inflation of the 1970s. Pocketbook Politics offers a new interpretation of state power by integrating popular politics and elite policymaking. Unlike most social historians who focus exclusively on consumers at the grass-roots, Jacobs breaks new methodological ground by insisting on the centrality of national politics and the state in the nearly century-long fight to fulfill the American Dream of abundance. Read more

XRay Not Enabled
Format Print Replica
ISBN13 978-1400843787
Language English
File size 12.8 MB
Page Flip Not Enabled
Publisher Princeton University Press
Word Wise Not Enabled
Print length 368 pages
Accessibility Learn more
Part of series Politics and Society in Modern America
Publication date February 20, 2007
Enhanced typesetting Not Enabled

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