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White Protestant Nation: The Rise Of the American Conservative Movement
 
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White Protestant Nation: The Rise Of the American Conservative Movement (Paperback)

by Allan J. Lichtman (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
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From Publishers Weekly

This comprehensive study of conservative politics from the post-WWI era to the present is replete with clear analysis and good nuggets of information. Lichtman (The Keys of the White House) profiles the behind-the-scenes operators who have crafted the marching orders for right-wing Americans in the last half-century—financiers like J. Howard Pew, Frank Gannett and the Du Ponts, direct-mail kingpin Richard Viguerie and drawing-room conservatives like William F. Buckley and Bill Kristol. Lichtman observes how a clique of probusiness, mainly Protestant, Americans chaffed at the birth of the welfare state under Democratic administrations and built a network of organizations to resist social engineering and encroaching federal power. The book argues that in postwar America, rising fears over immigration, desegregation and sexual egalitarianism gave bloom to an ethic of Anglo-Saxon supremacy—but Lichtman ignores the deep roots such ideas have in American culture. Lichtman also neglects the transformation in the post–civil rights era, when the conservative movement tried to shed its extreme racial and cultural doctrines and began attracting minority voters and politicos. As a structural blueprint of conservative political power, however, this book is without peer, giving readers a wonderful historical survey of the last 80 years of conservative politics. (June)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Shifting Faces of American Conservatism, Nov 8 2008
By Coach C (Canada) - See all my reviews
(TOP 50 REVIEWER)   
One of the most comprehensive volumes I've come across on the origins and rise of modern American conservatism. "White Protestant Nation" chronicles the arc of the conservative movement from its Protestant beginnings during the progressive era through to the George Bush era. The book is probably more political history than social history, but Lichtman dabbles into some of the cultural influences here and there.

Ultimately, the anti-pluralist vision of conservatism attempts to reconcile the contradictions through a self-righteousness based on the doctrinal authority of a Christian God. Unlike pluralist Libertarians, Conservatives back the loss of constitutional restraints on big government, misguided imperial ventures and social engineering, all in the name of God and country - to protect American pocketbooks and to save their souls.

But Lichtman asks, can conservatives serve both God and mammon? That is the question that faces the GOP in the face of a triple defeat in 2008. But while Bush may have setback the conservative movement, the combination of puritan values and free-enterprise is something ingrained into the DNA of Americanism - the right will rise again, it is just a matter of time.

The book is a mammoth volume at 450+ pages and 100+ pages of endnotes. Lichtman has used mostly the original papers from the Library of Congress for his primary research that spans an impressive 100 years. As someone who is well read in American history, the book read very much like a survey text, but the detail will certainly appear daunting for the average reader. Overall, I have to recommend this book because it not only explains why America is a center-right country, but also why it will remain that way for the foreseeable future.
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