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The Postwar World

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Title: The Postwar World


1
The Postwar World
  • Conformity and change
  • from 1945 through the 1960s

2
A North American Society
  • St. Lawrence Seaway a joint U.S.- Canadian
    project.
  • Immigration from Caribbean to U.S. brings Latin
    influences to American culture from the Mambo and
    the Cha Cha to the character of Ricky Ricardo on
    I Love Lucy to the Puerto Rican characters in
    West Side Story.

3
Canada
  • In Canada, the mid-century Liberal Party
    leadership of MacKenzie-King continued with the
    Liberal government of Louis St. Laurent (1948-57)
    but then switched to the Conservative government
    of John Diefenbaker (prime minister 1957-1963).
  • Canada sees self tied more to North America and
    the U.S. for economics and defense instead of the
    fading British Empire.
  • The postwar liberal consensus promotes major
    social programs such as universal health care and
    other social programs.

4
Mexico
  • In Mexico, although still dominated by the PRI,
    leaders such as Miguel Aleman Valdes and A. Ruiz
    Cortines move away from the hard left Cardenas
    policies to more business-oriented approaches,
    including the development of the Mexican tourist
    industry.

5
In the Caribbean.
  • British Caribbean Federation Act of 1956
    attempted to unify British islands. Results in
    the creation of the West Indies Federation in
    1958, which extended from Jamaica in the north to
    Trinidad and Tobago in the south.
  • Capital in Trinidad and Tobago.
  • Sir Grantley Adams of Barbados was first prime
    minister.

6
One from ten leaves nought
  • Divisions and struggles plagued the federation
    from the start.
  • Jamaica voted to leave the federation in 1961 to
    embark on its own course of independence, which
    it attained in 1962.
  • With its largest member out, other islands
    considered leaving as well. The West Indies
    Federation collapsed in 1962.

7
From playground to proletariat Cuba
  • While Havana was a hotspot for Americans in the
    1950s, political instability continued to mount.
  • Marxist Fidel Castro launched an attack on
    military barracks in1953, but failed. Went to
    Mexico where organized movement with help of
    figures like Ernesto Che Guevara.
  • Opposition to Batistas administration grew from
    both the right and the left.

8
Revolucion!
  • In 1956, Castro landed at Sierra Maestra and
    established a revolutionary movement.
  • In 1958, Batista goes into exile, leaving the
    military in charge.
  • In 1959, Supreme Court says Castros movement is
    the legitimate government. Castros forces move
    into Havana and Fidel Castro named prime minister
    of Cuba.
  • A program of nationalization of anti-foreign
    influence in Cuba began almost immediately.

9
Cold War Politics Domestic
  • Election of 1948. Harry S. Truman (shown here,
    center, at the creation of the Atomic Energy
    Commission) defeats Dewey but Trumans pro-civil
    rights stand alienates white Southerners
  • In 1952, Dwight D Eisenhower elected.
  • By mid-1940s, conservative Republicans and
    Southern Democrats are the main influences in
    Congress (especially the Senate) and hold many
    governorships as well.

10
McCarthyism
  • In early 1950s, Senator Joseph McCarthy announces
    that he has a list of known communists. Begins
    witch-hunt known as McCarthyism.
  • Loyalty to the United States was considered
    important. The fear was that communism was not
    just a political force, but something subversive
    that would undermine American society if given a
    chance.
  •  Remember that communism was relatively
    fashionable in the 1930s, esp. among
    intellectuals and entertainers. Now things are
    different.
  • The result was a new Red Scare.

11
Anti-communism and society
  • In popular culture, 1930s stars were targeted and
    ousted if perceived as communists.
  • People could be fired for being suspected of
    communism.
  • Speaking out against these actions could put one
    in trouble as being labeled a communist. Plays
    that criticized public tolerance of the witch
    hunts such as Arthur Millers The Crucible were
    shocking and controversial at the time.
  • In April 1951, Julius and Ethel Rosenberg were
    sentenced to death (and executed in 1953) for
    giving information about atomic technology to the
    Soviet agents in 1944.

12
Prosperity as National Security
  • G.I Bill allows veterans access to loans for
    houses and education.
  • Veterans preferences for hiring allows returning
    personnel to get jobs.
  • Construction of high technology for the defense
    industry (Boeing, Motorola, etc.) as well as
    maintaining military bases and uranium mines
    opens new avenues for well-paid employment.
    (Wichitas Boeing plant is shown here).
  • 1956 Highway Act supports federal construction of
    cross-country highways.
  • Construction of Alaska Highway and Trans-Canada
    Highway bring development to western and northern
    North America.

13
The Result
  • Growing dependence on automobile.
  • Boom in suburbs such as Levittowns and other
    planned communities.
  • Growth in universities, especially programs
    related to the sciences
  • Prosperity for middle classes allows people more
    free time and disposable income to travel and
    purchase consumer goods.

14
The Good Life (for some)
  • The ideal living arrangement was the ranch
    house surrounded by lawns in a suburb. The
    central room is not the formal parlor or even
    living room, but the family room where kids
    could be raised.
  • For women, there is a renewed move towards
    domesticity, in image if not fact. The family
    wage allows the man to work while the woman can
    stay home to care for the children.

15
Modern Good
  • Daily life centered around balancing traditional
    values with the latest modern technology.
  • Appliances, especially televisions, became
    common, even expected parts of daily life.
  • Science was to make things better and better,
    including research on child-rearing.
  • The trend, promoted by Dr. Spock (no, not Mr.
    Spock) was that childrens creativity and
    individuality should be cultivated and nourished,
    rather than formed through strict discipline, as
    in earlier generations.
  • Popularity of modern design concepts such as
    Googie
  • Abstract Expressionism becomes popular in art
    circles.

16
The Consumer Society
  • Shopping malls with vast parking lots become
    standard.
  • Decline of mom and pop stores in favor of
    national chains such as Piggly Wiggly or
    Woolworths.
  • Start of decline of downtown business districts.
  • Children become increasingly important part of
    market. Childrens programs such as Howdy
    Doody, Lone Ranger, and Hopalong Cassidy are
    popular figures with their own line of
    merchandise.

17
The ideal
  • Popular culture, including television shows,
    emphasized how America was a place of tolerance
    and freedom, compared to communism of the present
    or fascism of the past.
  • In the words of a book of the time,
    Protestant-Catholic-Jew were all legitimate
    manifestations of American religious practice.
    Election of Catholic John F. Kennedy was seen as
    a case in point.

18
Fears and challenges
  • American society was still highly segregated. By
    the mid-1950s, however, growing challenges to
    that segregation started emerging (to be
    discussed later in the course).
  • Some popular culture also criticized the
    look-alike conformity of the age. There was a
    fear that American culture was so orderly, tame,
    and sanitized, that all the life was being
    drained from it.
  • Fear that if Americans let their guard down,
    communists would take over and the Good Life
    would be lost. Symbolized, for example, in horror
    movies that featured zombie-like or evil
    creatures that attacked suburban society and
    reduced residents to mindless drones.

19
Books, authors, and documents
  • David Riesman, et al. The Lonely Crowd
  • Rachel Carson Silent Spring
  • Jane Jacobs The Death and Life of Great American
    Cities
  • Betty Friedan The Feminine Mystique
  • Jessica Mitford The American Way of Death
  • Roderick Nash Wilderness and the American Mind
  • Barry Goldwater Conscience of a Conservative
  • The Second Vatican Council aka Vatican II

20
Liberalism Returns
  • Election of John F. Kennedy in 1960. Represents
    youth and promise of the World War II generation
    assuming the reigns of power. First Catholic
    elected president.

21
John F. Kennedy
  • Embodied image of youthful exuberance. Appointed
    pragmatic intellectuals to cabinet.
  • Dean RuskSecretary of State
  • Adlai Stevensonto United Nations
  • Robert McNamara, president of Ford Motor Company,
    was Secretary of Defense.
  •  However, while was popular as a figure, had to
    contend with conservative Republicans and
    southern Democrats in Congress.
  •  Programs of his New Frontier platform were to
    stimulate growth, helping needy groups with
    social welfare, etc. Yet had problems. Getting
    civil rights reforms passed was extremely
    difficult.  Anti-communist and foreign policy
    items were easier to get through. Also had to
    prove that he was not soft on communism.

22
Lyndon B. Johnson
  •  From Texas. Like Kennedy, was from a very
    politically active family. Was in House of
    Representatives in 1937. Strong New Dealer.
    Senator in 1948. Late 1950s, was majority leader
    in the Senate.
  •  Assassination of John F. Kennedy November 1963.
    Lyndon B. Johnson (LBJ) becomes president and is
    elected on his own terms in 1964.

23
The War on Poverty
24
The Great Society
  •  Real passion was for a program called the Great
    Society, to wage a war on Poverty. At the
    time, 1/5 of population was still in poverty.

25
Great Society Programs
  • Civil Rights Act of 1964
  • Voting Rights Act of 1965
  • Medicare and Medicaid
  • Housing and Urban Development (HUD)
  • Office of Economic Opportunity
  • National Endowments of the Arts and Humanities
  • Public Television

26
But.
  • Yet, one historian put it that the so-called War
    on Poverty was in reality little more than a
    pilot project. Would largely be overshadowed by
    the conflict in Vietnam.  

27
The Times they are a-changin
  • Changing cultural landscapes

28
Terms
  • Racism The attitude that one race is inherently
    better than another.
  •  Discrimination Practice of limiting what a
    person is allowed to do based on assumed
    characteristics other than merit or competency
    for an activity.
  •  Segregation In the U.S. context, is a policy of
    restricting of access to a person or group of
    people based on race or ethnicity.

29
Segregation Types
  • Legal-official ordinances either city, state, or
    county
  • Policyeither intended or unintended
  • Personal-individuals choosing where to live.
  • Spatiala byproduct of how communities developed.
    May be based on things such as economics or
    transportation links.

30
Segregation Arenas
  • Voting and governance
  • Residential
  • Work/commercial/social access
  • Public facilities and services
  • Education and institutions
  • Lifestylese.g. marriage and adoption
  •  

31
Tools and techniques
  • Campaigns that gained media attention such as
    sit-ins, protest marches, civil disobedience.
  • Tension between those who favored moderate reform
    in courts and public opinion to gain more civil
    rights within the societys existing framework
    vs. those in favor of more activist efforts to
    change the system itself.

32
Two phases
  • 1945-1965
  • Advocated reform within structures of society.
    Often targeted legal barriers and sought to bring
    the civil rights and opportunities that white
    males had long enjoyed to groups that had been
    excluded.
  • 1965-1980
  • Suggested that the very economic, social, and
    political dynamics within the society had to be
    changed. Saw problems as rooted in deep-seated
    attitudes that were hard to change with court
    decisions or new laws.

33
African Americans
34
Changes in 1940s
  • World War II units were segregated.
  • 1947 Jackie Robinson allowed to play for a major
    league team.
  • 1948 Truman orders military to desegregate.
  • Civil Rights became an issue in 1948 election.
    White southerners start leaving the Democratic
    party. Some, such as Strom Thurmond, become
    Dixiecrats.

35
Challenging legal segregation
  • In Sweatt v. Painter, Supreme Court rules against
    segregated law schools in 1950.
  • NAACP organizes five cases to go before the
    Supreme Court. One involved Brown v. the Board
    of Education of Topeka, Kansas.
  • In 1954, Supreme Court rules that separate is
    inherently unequal. Overturns Plessy v. Ferguson.
  • In 1955, the decision known as Brown II orders
    schools to desegregate.

36
Civil Rights activities
  • December 1955. Rosa Parks refuses to give up her
    seat on a segregated bus in Montgomery, AL. Is
    arrested. Results in Montgomery Bus Boycott lead
    by Martin Luther King.
  • 1958. Students in Wichita conducted a sit-in at
    the Dockum Drug Store. Forced the chain to
    desegregate.
  • 1960. A more publicized sit-in took place in
    Greensboro, NC.

37
Preserving Segregation
  • Governor Orval Faubus of Arkansas refuses to
    desegregate schools. Eisenhower calls in the
    National Guard to enforce desegregation.
  • Renewed growth of the KKK
  • One symbolic part of this movement was the
    embrace of the Confederate battle flag as a
    symbol of Southerness.

38
Organizations
  • National Association for the Advancement of
    Colored People (NAACP)
  • National Urban League
  • Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC)
  • Congress of Racial Equality (CORE)
  • Student Non-Violent Coordinating Commission (SNCC)

39
Activism in the 1960s
  • White students from came to the South to
    challenge segregated facilities. Included
    freedom rides.
  • Martin Luther King organized protest marches, the
    most famous included a march in Birmingham, AL,
    and one in Washington, D.C., both in 1963.
  • Resulted in the 1964 Civil Rights Act. Outlawed
    discrimination and segregation. Established the
    Equal Employment Opportunity Commission to ensure
    prohibit discrimination in job settings.

40
Getting the voteagain
  • Freedom summer of 1964. Organized efforts to get
    African Americans to vote.
  • In 1965, Martin Luther King lead a march from
    Selma, AL to Montgomery. State troopers attacked
    the march, the violence of which got caught on
    tape and put on the evening news.
  • Result was the 1965 Voting Rights Act bans
    restrictions on voting based on race.

41
Debate in the community
  • Martin Luther King
  • Baptist Minister
  • Appealed to middle class African Americans and
    whites.
  • Emphasized nonviolent tactics and peaceful civil
    disobedience to call attention to issues.
  • Felt whites and African Americans must work to
    overcome racism.
  • Assassinated in 1968.
  • Malcolm X
  • Became involved in the Nation of Islam
  • Believed that racism was inherent in society and
    could not be erased.
  • Advocated a African Americans separate from
    larger society to develop their own institutions.
  • African Americans who were trying to work within
    the larger society were simply Uncle Toms who
    were still playing in the white mans game.
  • Assassinated in 1965.

42
The debate, 1963
  • King
  • Now is the time to rise from the dark and
    desolate valley of segregation to the sunlit path
    of racial justice. Now is the time to open the
    doors of opportunity to all Gods children. Now
    is the time to lift our nation from the
    quicksands of racial injustice to the solid rock
    of brotherhood.
  • Malcolm X
  • An integrated cup of coffee isnt sufficient pay
    for four hundred years of slave labora better
    job in the white mans industry or economy is, at
    best, only a temporary solution. The only lasting
    and permanent solution is complete separation on
    some land that we can call our own.

43
Postwar urban issues
  • The first migration of African Americans in the
    1910s and 1920s had been relatively urban even in
    the South with numbers of professionals and
    business leaders along with workers.
  • Second migration from the 1930s through the 1950s
    consisted of more rural populations and more
    laborers. Found few opportunities up north.

44
One perspective
  • It seems that Cousin Willie, in his lying haste,
    had neglected to tell the folks down home about
    one of the most important aspects of the promised
    land it was a slum ghettoThere were too many
    people full of hate and bitterness crowded into a
    dirty, stinky, uncared-for closet size section of
    a great city. Before the soreness of the cotton
    fields had left Mamas back, her knees were
    getting sore from scrubbing Goldbergs floor.
    Nevertheless she was better off she had gone
    from the fire into the frying pan. From Claude
    Brown, Manchild in the Promised Land

45
Urban responses, urban ironies
  • Groups such as the Nation of Islam, advocating an
    African identity and emphasizing patronizing
    African American businesses.
  • Formation of groups such as the Black Panthers.
  • Race riots, one of the most infamous was Watts in
    1965.
  • Government programs of President Lyndon Johnsons
    Great Society program thought the solution was
    large blocks of public housing that replaced
    earlier blight. Ended up concentrating the
    poverty even more.

46
Women
47
Issues
  • Opportunity in the workplace
  • Questioning role in society as only mothers or
    supporters of men as husbands and/or leaders.
  • Harassment
  • Legal rights in marriage and family matters

48
Questioning the roles
  • Simone de Beauvoir published The Second Sex in
    1953, discussing womens subjugation in society.
  • In 1963, Betty Friedan published The Feminine
    Mystique, noting that for many women, the
    suburban ideal did not turn out to guarantee the
    happiness the popular culture promised.

49
From The Feminine Mystique
  • If I am right, the problem that has no name
    stirring in the minds of so many American women
    today is not a matter of loss of femininity or
    too much education, the demands of domesticityWe
    can no longer ignore that voice within women that
    says I want something more than my husband and
    my children and my home.

50
Early activities
  • Kennedy administration was the first to study the
    status of women.
  • 1964 Civil Rights Act included ban on
    discrimination based on sex. Was a last minute
    addition intended to kill the bill.
  • 1966. Formation of the National Organization of
    Women (NOW).

51
First wave of feminists
  • Tended to be white, middle class, and educated.
    Used similar tactics as African American civil
    rights movement. Issues included
  • An Equal Rights Amendment to the Constitution  
  • Employment opportunity be guaranteed 
  • Maternity leave established 
  • Tax laws to permit the deduction of home and
    child-care expenses for working parents 
  • Child Care facilities be established as public
    endeavors 
  • Legislation (state and fed) support equal access
    to education
  • Reproductive rights

52
Second wave (1960s and 1970s)
  • Advocated not just legal or economic changes but
    rethinking of gender roles in society.
  • Advocated a concept of sisterhood.
  • Still middle class but more linked to
    anti-Vietnam war protest movement or
    counterculture movement.
  • Growing awareness of different groups within the
    womens community such as Latinas, African
    American women, and lesbians.
  • Began criticizing the sexism within the civil
    rights, protest, and labor movements.
  • Also concerned that the womens movement had
    traditionally been of, by, and for middle class
    white women.

53
Changes in the 1970s
  • Ms. Magazine published.
  • 1973. Roe v. Wade legalized abortion.
  • Military integrated women into the armed forces.
  • Equal Rights Amendment passed Congress but failed
    to get enough states to support it to become an
    addition to the Constitution.
  • Television programs such as Mary Tyler Moore
    showed single women as successful professionals.

54
Latino and Mexican Changes
55
Major demographic groups
  • Latinos who were part of northern Mexico/American
    Southwest and were absorbed into the United
    States in the 1800s.
  • Migrants from Mexico who fled poverty and the
    turmoil of the Mexican revolution. In Kansas,
    came to work on the railroads.
  • Migrant workers from Mexico who came to work the
    fields of Texas, Arizona, and California. Became
    especially numerous with the Bracero program of
    the 1940s and 50s.
  • Migrants from Puerto Rico, Cuba, and the
    Caribbean into the cities from Miami to New York.
  • Migrants from Mexico and Central America who
    arrived in the wake of immigration laws of the
    1960s that did away with quotas.

56
Organizations
  • La Alianza Hispano Americana formed 1894
  • In 1929, several Latin American civic groups
    merge to form League of United Latin American
    Citizens (LULAC). Early efforts centered around
    desegregation and anti-discrimination issues.
  • Brown Berets organized in 1967 as a more activist
    organization.
  • National Council for La Raza promoted Hispanic
    pride and solidarity.

57
Cesar Chavez
  • Cesar Chavez was a labor organizer among the
    migrant workers of California. Helped form the
    United Farm Workers (UFW).
  • Used tactics of Martin Luther King to advocate
    non-violent protests to focus media and public
    attention on migrant worker issues.
  • Advocated the public participate in boycotts of
    certain produce, especially grapes.

58
The Chicano/Xicano Movement
  • A movement to promote a pride in a Mexican
    identity.
  • Mexican identity, rather than being Spanish
    American or even a blending of Spanish and
    Indian, was seen as more connected to the Aztecs
    and native peoples of Mesoamerica.
  • Rejected the Spanish heritage as simply the
    heritage of European conquerors.

59
The Left Returns to the Americas
  • Fidel Castro overthrows the Batista government in
    Cuba in 1959.
  • Rise of leftist sentiments in 1960s Mexico
    challenge the establishment. Particularly visible
    in student protest at the National University in
    1968.

60
The Qurious Qase of Quebec
61
Quebecs role in Canada
  • Politically, it functioned akin to the U.S.s
    South in that it was a major force to be reckoned
    with. All national policies had to address a
    very powerful Quebecois political presence.
  • Culturally, however, Quebec functioned akin to
    other marginalized minority groups asserting
    greater visibility in society with a
    reaffirmation of ethnic identity and solidarity.

62
Francophone Nationalism
  • In Canada, greater emphasis on ethnic identity in
    the 1960s corresponded with a rise in Quebecois
    nationalism and the move towards bilingualism,
    especially under the administration of PM John
    Pearson.
  • Books like Pierre Vallieres controversial The
    White Niggers of America argued that working
    class Quebecois had been an exploited people
    under the thumb of Quebecs elites, Canadian
    politics, and the U.S. domination of North
    America. The only way to change things is the
    completely overthrow the system.
  • Quebecois presence in government included Prime
    Minister Pierre Trudeau.
  • Meanwhile, politicians such as Rene Levesque
    moved for Quebecs provincial government to take
    a greater role in managing its own social
    programs and energy policy separate from that of
    the rest of Canada.
  • Radicals disaffected with the Liberal Partys
    stance formed the Parti Quebecois advocating
    greater autonomy and even quasi-independence for
    Quebec.

63
Vallieres view of things
  • It has become a cliché to say that Quebec is a
    colony, a sub-colony, a triple colony, etc. The
    dependence of Quebec in relation to foreign
    countries is a constant in its history.For ever
    since Champlain established a trading post in
    Quebec in 1608, Quebec has always been subject to
    the interests of the dominant classes of the
    imperialist countries first France, then
    England, and today the United States. Pierre
    Vallieres, White Niggers of America

64
The Environment
65
Outdoor Recreation Movement
  • In middle of the twentieth century, environmental
    ethics were tied largely outdoor recreation
    activities such as hunters, hikers, and
    fishermen. Has mostly been an urban constituency.
  • Groups like the National Park Association, Sierra
    Club, Audubon Society,and National Wildlife
    Federation worked for more parks, national
    forests, and game preserves. Opposed
    construction of dams in the American West that
    were flooding many scenic areas of the region.

66
Changing values
  • In 1962, Rachel Carson published Silent Spring
    about the hazards of pesticides.
  • Wilderness Movement advocated setting aside lands
    with little or no development, even for outdoor
    recreation.
  • Growing awareness of ecology and that the
    environment is a web that if destroyed, will also
    harm humans. Encourages seeing habitat and
    ecosystems rather than just scenery. Groups such
    as Greenpeace took a more activist approach to
    environmental issues.

67
Policy Results
  • Clean Air Act 1955 (amended several times in the
    1960s)
  • Wilderness Act 1964
  • National Environmental Policy Act 1969
  • Earth Day 1970
  • Environmental Protection Agency Act 1970
  • Endangered Species Act 1973

68
Legacies
69
Uncertain paths
  • By the 1970s, many of the official barriers of
    the 1940s, 1950s, and 1960s, such as legal
    segregation, had been done away with. Laws and
    policies promoted civil rights, addressed
    environmental concerns, and tried to deal with
    social and economic inequalities. However

70
Unintended consequences
  • Integration got rid of Jim Crow but also
    eliminated the need for African Americans to
    patronize African American business.
  • Integrating social institutions such as churches
    sometimes resulted in the closing of institutions
    that had been centers in their community.
  • Urban renewal did away with some aspects of urban
    blight but concentrated that blight into larger
    housing blocks. Federal highways constructed
    within cities destroyed large sections of old
    neighborhoods.
  • Integrated bussing, intended to bring the races
    closer together, sometimes resulted in friction
    within schools as different racial/ethnic groups
    came into conflict with each other in the school
    halls.
  • Greater awareness of civil rights among many
    groups pointed out that there was no such thing
    as a simple division between oppressed and
    oppressor. The very groups advocating for
    change sometimes were blind to the sexism,
    racism, and cultural biases among their own
    ranks. It became increasingly apparent that
    someone to be oppressor and oppressed
    simultaneously.

71
Political Ramifications
  • Issues of civil rights and the conflict in
    Vietnam drove wedges between the moderate and
    activist wings of both parties. Democrats became
    increasingly identified with ideological
    liberals, minority groups, and labor.
    Republicans became increasingly connected with
    ideological conservatives, business, the South,
    and West.
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