Chapter 37 Outline
I. Affluence and Its
Anxieties
1.
The economy really sprouted during the
50s, and the invention of the transistor exploded the electronics field,
especially in computers, helping such companies as International Business
Machines (IBM) expand and prosper.
2.
Aerospace industries progressed, as the
Boeing company made the first passenger-jet airplane (adapted from the
superbombers of the Strategic Air Command), the 707.
3.
In 1956, “white-collar” workers
outnumbered “blue collar” workers for the first time, meaning that the
industrial era was passing on. As this occurred, labor unions peaked in 1954
then started a steady decline.
4.
Women appeared more and more in the
workplace, despite the stereotypical role of women as housewives that was being
portrayed on TV shows such as “Ozzie and Harriet” and “Leave It to Beaver.”
5.
More than 40 million new jobs were
created.
6.
Women’s expansion into the workplace
shocked some, but really wasn’t surprising if one observed the trends in
history, and now, they were both housewives and workers.
7.
Betty Friedan’s 1963 book The Feminine
Mystique was a best-seller and a classic of modern feminine protest literature.
She’s the godmother of the feminist movement.
II. Consumer Culture
in the Fifties
1.
The fifties saw the first Diner’s Club
cards, the opening of McDonald’s, the debut of Disneyland, and an explosion in
the number of television stations in the country.
2.
Advertisers used television to sell
products while “televangelists” like Billy Graham, Oral Roberts, and Fulton J.
Sheen used TV to preach the gospel and encourage religion.
3.
Sports shifted west, as the Brooklyn
Dodgers and New York Giants moved to Los Angeles and San Francisco,
respectively, in 1958.
4.
Elvis Presley, a white singer of the
new “rock and roll” who made girls swoon with his fleshy face, pointing lips, and
antic, sexually suggestive gyrations, that redefined popular music.
5.
Elvis died from drugs in 1977, at age
42.
6.
Traditionalists were shocked by Elvis’s
shockingly open sexuality, and Marilyn Monroe (in her Playboy magazine spread) continued
in the redefinition of the new sensuous sexuality.
7.
Critics, such as David Riesman in The
Lonely Crowd, William H. Whyte, Jr. in The Organization Man, and Sloan Wilson
in The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit, lamented this new consumerist style.
8.
Harvard economist John Kenneth
Galbraith questioned the relation between private wealth and public good in The
Affluent Society.
9.
Daniel Bell found further such
paradoxes, as did C. Wright Mills.
III. The Advent of
Eisenhower
1.
In 1952, the Democrats chose Adlai E.
Stevenson, the witty governor of Illinois, while Republicans rejected isolationist
Robert A. Taft and instead chose World War II hero Dwight D. Eisenhower to run
for president and anticommunist Richard M. Nixon to be his running mate.
2.
Grandfatherly Eisenhower was a war hero
and liked by everyone, so he left the rough part of campaigning to Nixon, who
attacked Stevenson as soft against communists, corrupt, and weak in the Korean
situation.
3.
Nixon then almost got caught with a
secretly financed “slush fund,” but to save his political career, he delivered
his famous and touching “Checkers Speech.” In it, he denied wrongdoing and
spoke of his family and specifically, his daughter’s cute little cocker
spaniel, Checkers. He was forgiven in the public arena and stayed on as V.P.
4.
The “Checkers speech” showed the
awesome power of television, since Nixon had pleaded on national TV, and even
later, “Ike,” as Eisenhower was called, agreed to go into studio and answer
some brief “questions,” which were later spliced in and edited to make it look
like Eisenhower had answered questions from a live audience, when in fact he
hadn’t.
5.
This showed the power that TV would
have in the upcoming decades, allowing lone wolves to appeal directly to the
American people instead of being influenced by party machines or leaders.
6.
Ike won easily (442 to 89), and true to
his campaign promise, he flew to Korea to help move along peace negotiations,
yet failed. But seven months later, after Ike threatened to use nuclear
weapons, an armistice was finally signed (but was later violated often).
7.
In Korea, 54,000 Americans had died,
and tens of billions of dollars had been wasted in the effort, but Americans
took a little comfort in knowing that communism had been “contained.”
8.
Eisenhower had been an excellent commander
and leader who was able to make cooperation possible between anyone, so he
seemed to be a perfect leader for Americans weary of two decades of depression,
war, and nuclear standoff.
9.
He served that aspect of his job well,
but he could have used his popularity to champion civil rights more than he
actually did.
IV. The Rise and Fall
of Joseph McCarthy
1.
In February 1950, Joseph R. McCarthy
burst upon the scene, charging that there were scores of unknown communists in
the State Department.
2.
He couldn’t prove it, and many American
began to fear that this red chase was going too far; after all, how could there
be freedom of speech if saying communist ideas got one arrested?
3.
The success of brutal anticommunist “crusader”
Joseph R. McCarthy was quite alarming, for after he had sprung onto the national
scene by charging that Secretary of State Dean Acheson was knowingly employing
205 Communist Party members (a claim he never proved, not even for one person),
he ruthlessly sought to prosecute and persecute suspected communists, often
targeting innocent people and destroying families and lives.
4.
Eisenhower privately loathed McCarthy,
but the president did little to stop the anti-red, since it appeared that most
Americans supported his actions. But Ike’s zeal led him to purge important
Asian experts in the State Department, men who could have advised a better course
of action in Vietnam.
5.
He even denounced General George
Marshall, former army chief of staff during World War II.
6.
Finally, in 1954, when he attacked the
army, he’d gone too far and was exposed for the liar and drunk that he was;
three years later, he died unwept and unsung.
V. Desegregating
American Society
1.
Blacks in the South were bound by the
severe Jim Crow laws that segregated every aspect of society, from schools to
restrooms to restaurants and beyond.
2.
Only about 20% of the eligible blacks
could vote, due to intimidation, discrimination, poll taxes, and other schemes
meant to keep black suffrage down.
3.
Where the law proved sufficient to
enforce such oppression, vigilante justice in the form of lynchings did the
job, and the white murderers were rarely caught and convicted.
4.
In his 1944 book, An American Dilemma,
Swedish scholar Gunnar Myrdal exposed the hypocrisy of American life, noting
how while “every man [was] created equal,” blacks were certainly treated worse
than Whites. He pointed out how the U.S. had failed to achieve its “Double-V”
goal during the war—victory overseas against dictatorships (and their racism)
and victory at home against racism.
5.
Even though Jackie Robinson had cracked
the racial barrier by signing with the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947, the nation’s conscience
still paid little attention to the suffering of blacks, thus prolonging their
pain.
6.
However, with organizations such as the
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, and their rulings
such as the 1950 case of Sweatt v. Painter, where the Supreme Court ruled that
separate professional schools for blacks failed to meet the test of equality, such
protestors as Rosa Parks, who in December 1955, refused to give up a bus seat
in the “whites only” section, and pacifist leaders like Martin Luther King,
Jr., who believed in peaceful methods of civil rights protests, blacks were making
their suffering and discrimination known to the public.
VI. Seeds of the
Civil Rights Revolution
1.
After he heard about the 1946 lynchings
of black soldiers seeking rights for which they fought overseas, Truman
immediately sought to improve black rights by desegregating the armed forces,
but Eisenhower failed to continue this trend by failing to support laws. Only
the judicial branch was left to improve black civil rights.
2.
Earl Warren, appointed Chief Justice of
the Supreme Court, shocked his conservative backers by actively assailing black
injustice and ruling in favor of African-Americans.
3.
The 1954 landmark case of Brown v.
Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas, reversed the previous 1896 ruling of Plessy
v. Ferguson
when the Brown case said that “separate but equal” facilities were inherently
unequal. Under the Brown case, schools were ordered integrated.
4.
However, while the Border States usually
obeyed this new ruling, states in the Deep South did everything they could to
delay it and disobey it, diverting funds to private schools, signing a “Declaration
of Constitutional Principles” that promised not to desegregate, and physically
preventing blacks to integrate.
5.
Ten years after the ruling, fewer than
2% of eligible black students sat in the same classrooms as whites. Real
integration of schools in the Deep South occurred around 1970.
VII. Eisenhower
Republicanism at Home
1.
Eisenhower came into the White House
pledging a policy of “dynamic conservatism,” which stated that he would be liberal
with people, but conservative with their money.
2.
Ike decreased government spending by
decreasing military spending, trying to transfer control of offshore oil fields
to the states, and trying to curb the TVA by setting up a private company to
take its place.
3.
His secretary of health, education, and
welfare condemned free distribution of the Sal anti-polio vaccine as being
socialist.
4.
Secretary of Agriculture Ezra Taft
Benson tackled agriculture issues, but despite the government’s purchase of
surplus grain which it stored in giant silos costing Americans $2 million a
day, farmers didn’t see prosperity.
5.
Eisenhower also cracked down on illegal
Mexican immigration that cut down on the success of the bracero program, by
rounding up 1 million Mexicans and returning them to their native country in
1954.
6.
With Indians, though, Ike proposed
ending the lenient FDR-style treatment toward Indians and reverting to a Dawes
Severalty Act-style policy toward Native Americans. But due to protest and
resistance, this was disbanded.
7.
However, Eisenhower kept many of the
New Deal programs, since some, like Social Security and unemployment insurance,
simply had to stay in the public’s mind.
8.
However, he did do some of the New Deal
programs better, such as his backing of the Interstate Highway Act, which built
42,000 miles of interstate freeways.
9.
Still, Eisenhower only balanced the budget
three times in his eight years of office, and in 1959, he incurred the biggest
peacetime deficit in U.S. history up to that point.
10. Still,
critics said that he was economically timid, blaming the president for the
sharp economic downturn of 1957-58. Also, the AF of L merged with the CIO to
end 20 years of bitter division in labor unions. When it came to civil rights,
Eisenhower had a lukewarm record at best, and was slow to move.
11. Eisenhower
refused to issue a statement acknowledging the Supreme Court’s ruling on
integration, and he even privately complained about this new end to
segregation, but in September 1957, when Orval Faubus, the governor of
Arkansas, mobilized the National Guard to prevent nine black students from
enrolling in Little Rock’s Central High School, Ike sent federal troops to
escort the children to their classes.$
12. That
year, Congress passed the first Civil Rights Act since the Reconstruction days,
an act that set up a permanent Civil Rights Commission to investigate
violations of civil rights and authorized federal injunctions to protect voting
rights.
13. Meanwhile,
Martin Luther King, Jr. formed the Southern Christian Leadership Conference,
which aimed to mobilize the vast power of black churches on behalf of black rights—a
shrewd strategy, since churches were a huge source of leadership in the black
community.
14. On
February 1, 1960, four black college freshmen launched a “sit-in” movement in
Greensboro, North Carolina, demanding service at a whites-only Woolworth’s
lunch counter, thus sparking the sit-in movement.
15. In
April 1960, southern black students formed the Student Non-Violent Coordinating
Committee, or SNCC, to give more focus and force to their civil rights efforts.
VIII. A New Look in
Foreign Policy
1.
Secretary of State John Foster Dulles
stated that the policy of containment was not enough and that the U.S. was
going to push back communism and liberate the peoples under it. This became
known as “rollback.” All-the-while he advocated toning down defense spending by
building a fleet of superbombers called Strategic Air Command, which could drop
massive nuclear bombs in any retaliation.
2.
Eisenhower had a "new look"
on a policy of Massive Relatiation. Massive Reltaliation was the building up of
our forces in the sky to scare the enemys. We created the Strategic Air Command
(SAC). This was an airfleet of superbombers equipped with city-flattening nuclear
bombs. These fearsome weapons would inflict "Massive Retaliation" on the
enemy, and were also a great bang for the buck.
3.
Ike tried to thaw the Cold War by appealing
for peace to new Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev at the 1955 Geneva
Conference, but the Soviet leader rejected such proposals, along with one for
“open skies.”
4.
However, hypocritically, when the Hungarians
revolted against the U.S.S.R. and appealed to the U.S. for help, America did
nothing, earning the scorn of bitter freedom fighters.
IX. The Vietnam
Nightmare
1.
In Vietnam, revolutionary Ho Chi Minh
had tried to encourage Woodrow Wilson to help the Vietnamese against the French
and gained some support from Wilson, but as Ho became increasingly communist,
the U.S. began to oppose him.
2.
In March 1954, when the French became
trapped at Dienbienphu, Eisenhower’s aides wanted to bomb the Viet Minh
guerilla forces, but Ike held back, fearing plunging the U.S. into another
Asian war so soon after Korea. After the Vietnamese won at Dienbienphu, Vietnam
was split at the 17th parallel, supposedly temporarily.
3.
Ho Chi Minh was supposed to allow free
elections, but soon, Vietnam became clearly split between a communist north and
a pro-Western south. Dienbienphu marks the start of American interest in Vietnam.
Secretary Dulles created the Southeast Asian Treaty Organization (SEATO) to
emulate NATO, but this provided little help.
X. Cold War Crises in
Europe and the Middle East
1.
In 1955, the USSR formed the Warsaw
Pact to counteract NATO, but the Cold War did seem to be thawing a bit, as
Eisenhower pressed for reduction of arms, and the Soviets were surprisingly
cooperative, and Khrushchev publicly denounced Stalin’s brutality.
2.
However, in 1956, when the Hungarians
revolted against the USSR, the Soviets crushed them with brutality and massive
bloodshed.
3.
The U.S. did change some of its
immigration laws to let 30,000 Hungarians into America as immigrants.
4.
In 1953, to protect oil supplies in the
Middle East, the CIA engineered a coup in Iran that installed the youthful shah
Mohammed Reza Pahlevi, as ruler of the nation, protecting the oil for the time being,
but earning the wrath of Arabs that would be repaid in the 70s.
5.
The Suez crisis was far messier: President
Gamal Abdel Nasser, of Egypt, needed money to build a dam in the upper Nile and
flirted openly with the Soviet side as well as the U.S. and Britain, and upon
seeing this blatant communist association, Secretary of State Dulles dramatically
withdrew his offer, thus forcing Nasser to nationalize the dam.
6.
Late in October 1956, Britain, France,
and Israel suddenly attacked Egypt, thinking that the U.S. would supply them
with needed oil, as had been the case in WWII, but Eisenhower did not, and the
attackers had to withdraw. The Suez crisis marked the last time the U.S. could
brandish its “oil weapon.”
7.
In 1960, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Iraq,
Iran, and Venezuela joined to form the cartel Organization of Petroleum
Exporting Countries, or OPEC.
XI. Round Two for
“Ike”
1.
In 1956, Eisenhower again ran against Stevenson
and won easily by a landslide.
2.
The GOP called itself the “party of
peace” while the Democrats assaulted Ike’s health, since he had had a heart
attack in 1955 and a major abdominal operation in ’56.
3.
However, the Democrats did win the
House and Senate. After Secretary of State Dulles died of cancer in 1959 and presidential
assistant Sherman Adams was forced to leave under a cloud of scandal due to
bribery charges, Eisenhower, without his two most trusted and most helpful
aides, was forced to govern more and golf less.
4.
A drastic labor-reform bill in 1959
grew from recurrent strikes in critical industries.
5.
Teamster chief “Dave” Beck was sent to
prison for embezzlement, and his successor, James R. Hoffa’s appointment got the
Teamsters expelled out of the AF of L-CIO.
6.
Hoffa was later jailed for jury
tampering and then disappeared in prison, allegedly murdered by some gangsters
that he had crossed.
7.
The 1959 Landrum-Griffin Act was
designed to bring labor leaders to book for financial shenanigans and prevent
bullying tactics.
8.
Anti-laborites forced into the bill
bans against “secondary boycotts” and certain types of picketing.
9.
A “space-race” began in 1957. On
October 4, 1957, the Russians launched Sputnik I into space, and a month later,
they sent Sputnik II into orbit as well, thus totally demoralizing Americans,
because this seemed to prove communist superiority in the sciences at least.
10. Plus,
the Soviets might fire missiles at the U.S. from space. Critics charged that
Truman had not spent enough money on missile programs while America had used
its science for other things, like television. Four months after Sputnik I, the
U.S. sent its own satellite (weighing only 2.5 lbs) into space, but the
apparent U.S. lack of technology sent concerns over U.S. education, since
American children seemed to be learning less advanced information than Soviet
kids.
v
The 1958 National Defense and Education
Act (NDEA) gave $887
million in loads to
needy college students and grants for the
improvement of schools.
improvement of schools.
XII. The Continuing
Cold War
1.
Humanity-minded scientists called for
an end to atmospheric nuclear testing, lest future generations be deformed and
mutated.
2.
Beginning October 1958, Washington did
halt “dirty” testing, as did the U.S.S.R., but attempts to regularize such suspensions
were unsuccessful.
3.
However, in 1959, Khrushchev was invited
by Ike to America for talks, and when he arrived in New York, he immediately
spoke of disarmament, but gave no means of how to do it.
4.
Later, at Camp David, talks did show
upward signs, as the Soviet premier said that his ultimatum for the evacuation
of Berlin would be extended indefinitely.
5.
However, at the Paris conference, Khrushchev
came in angry that the U.S. had flown a U-2 spy plane over Soviet territory (in
this U-2 incident, the plane had been shot down and Eisenhower embarrassingly took
personal responsibility), and tensions immediately tightened again.
XIII. Cuba’s
Castroism Spells Communism
1.
Latin American nations resented the
United States’ giving billions of dollars to Europe compared to millions to
Latin America, as well as the U.S.’s constant intervention (Guatemala, 1954),
as well as its support of cold dictators who claimed to be fighting
communism.
communism.
2.
In 1959, in Cuba, Fidel Castro overthrew
U.S.-supported Fulgencio Batista, promptly denounced the Yankee imperialists,
and began to take U.S. properties for a land-distribution program. When the
U.S. cut off heavy U.S. imports of Cuban sugar, Castro confiscated more
American property.
3.
In 1961, America broke diplomatic
relations with Cuba.
4.
Khrushchev threatened to launch
missiles at the U.S. if it attacked Cuba; meanwhile, America induced the Organization
of American States to condemn communism in the Americas.
5.
Finally, Eisenhower proposed a “Marshall
Plan” for Latin America, which gave $500 million to the area, but many Latin Americans
felt that it was too little, too late.
XIV. Kennedy
Challenges Nixon for the Presidency
1.
The Republicans chose Richard Nixon,
gifted party leader to some, ruthless opportunist to others, in 1960 with Henry
Cabot Lodge Jr. as his running mate; while John F. Kennedy surprisingly won for
the Democrats and had Lyndon B. Johnson as his running mate.
2.
Kennedy was attacked because he was a
Catholic presidential candidate, but defended himself and encouraged Catholics
to vote for him. As it turned out, if he lost votes from the South due to his religion,
he got them back from the North due to the staunch Catholics there.
3.
In four nationally televised debates,
JFK held his own and looked more charismatic, perhaps helping him to win the
election by a comfortable margin, becoming the youngest president elected (TR
was younger after McKinley was assassinated).
XV. An Old General
Fades Away
1.
Eisenhower had his critics, but he was
appreciated more and more for ending one war and keeping the U.S. out of
others.
2.
Even though the 1951-passed 22nd Amendment
had limited him to two terms as president, Ike displayed more vigor and
controlled Congress during his second term than his first.
3.
In 1959, Alaska and Hawaii became the
49th and 50th states to join the Union.
4.
Perhaps Eisenhower’s greatest weakness
was his ignorance of social problems of the time, preferring to smile them away
rather than deal with them, even though he was no bigot.
XVI. The Life of the
Mind in Postwar America
1.
Ernest Hemingway’s The Old Man and the
Sea and John Steinbeck’s East of Eden and Travels with Charlie showed that prewar
writers could still be successful, but new writers, who, except for Norman
Mailer’s The Naked and the Dead and James Jones’s From Here to Eternity, spurned
realism, were successful as well.
2.
Joseph Heller’s Catch-22 and Kurt
Vonnegut, Jr.’s Slaughter-House Five crackled with fantastic and psychedelic
prose, satirizing the suffering of the war.
3.
Authors and books that explored
problems created by the new mobility and affluence of American life: John Updike’s
Rabbit, Run and Couples; John Cheever’s The Wapshot Chronicle and The Wapshot
Scandal; Louis Auchincloss’s books, and Gore Vidal’s Myra Breckinridge.
4.
The poetry of Ezra Pound, Wallace Stevens,
William Carlos Williams, Theodore Roethke, Robert Lowell (For the Union Dead),
Sylvia Plath (Ariel and The Bell-Jar), Anne Sexton, and John Berryman reflected
the twisted emotions of the war, but some poets were troubled in their own minds
as well, often committing suicide or living miserable lives.
5.
Tennessee Williams’s A Streetcar Named
Desire and Cat on a Hot Tin Roof were two plays that searched for American
values, as were Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman and The Crucible.
6.
Lorraine Hansberry’s A Raisin in the
Sun portrayed African-American life while Edward Albee’s Who’s Afraid of Virginia
Woolf? revealed the underside of middle class life.
7.
Books by black authors such as Richard
Wright (Black Boy), Ralph Ellison (Invisible Man), and James Baldwin made
best-seller’s lists; Black playwrights like LeRoi Jones made powerful plays
(The Dutchman).
8.
The South had literary artists like
William Faulkner (The Sound and the Fury, Light in August), Walker Percy, and
Eudora Welty.
9.
Jewish authors also had famous books,
such as J.D. Salinger’s Catcher in the Rye.
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