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On the Cusp: The Yale College Class of 1960 and a World on the Verge of Change

English

By (author): Daniel Horowitz

How did the 1950s become The Sixties? This is the question at the heart of Daniel Horowitzs On the Cusp. Part personal memoir, part collective biography, and part cultural history, the book illuminates the dynamics of social and political change through the experiences of a small, and admittedly privileged, generational cohort. A Jewish townie from New Haven when he entered Yale College in fall 1956, Horowitz reconstructs the undergraduate career of the class of 1960 and follows its story into the next decade. He begins by looking at curricular and extracurricular life on the all-male campus, then ranges beyond the confines of Yale to larger contexts, including the local drama of urban renewal, the lingering shadow of McCarthyism, and decolonization movements around the world.

He ponders the role of the university in protecting the prerogatives of class while fostering social mobility, and examines the growing significance of race and gender in American politics and culture, spurred by a convergence of the personal and the political. Along the way he traces the political evolution of his classmates, left and right, as Cold War imperatives lose force and public attention shifts to the civil rights movement and the war in Vietnam. Throughout Horowitz draws on a broad range of sources, including personal interviews, writings by classmates, reunion books, issues of the Yale Daily News, and other undergraduate publications, as well as his own letters and college papers. The end product is a work consistent with much of Horowitzs previously published scholarship on postwar America, further exposing the undercurrent of discontent and dissent that ran just beneath the surface of the so-called Cold War consensus. See more
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Product Details
  • Weight: 800g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 30 May 2015
  • Publisher: University of Massachusetts Press
  • Publication City/Country: United States
  • Language: English
  • ISBN13: 9781625341440

About Daniel Horowitz

Daniel Horowitz is Mary Huggins Gamble Professor of American Studies Emeritus at Smith College USA. He is author of Betty Friedan and the Making of The Feminine Mystique: The American Left the Cold War and Modern Feminism (University of Massachusetts Press 1998) and The Anxieties of Affluence: Critiques of American Consumer Culture 19391979 (University of Massachusetts Press 2004).

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