Book Search:  

 

 
Google full text of our books:

bookjacket

More Equal Than Others:
America from Nixon to the New Century
Godfrey Hodgson

Paper | 2006 | $24.95 / £14.95
Cloth | 2004 | $52.50 / £30.95
408 pp. | 6 x 9

Shopping Cart | Reviews | Table of Contents
Chapter 1 [HTML] or [PDF]

LEARN MORE ABOUT PRINCETON'S SPECIAL SALE

Google full text of this book:
 


Paper $15.00
40% off regular price

Cloth $9.00
83% off regular price

For customers in the
U.S. and Canada only

During the past quarter century, free-market capitalism was recognized not merely as a successful system of wealth creation, but as the key determinant of the health of political and cultural democracy. Now, renowned British journalist and historian Godfrey Hodgson takes aim at this popular view in a book that promises to become one of the most important political histories of our time. More Equal Than Others looks back on twenty-five years of what Hodgson calls "the conservative ascendancy" in America, demonstrating how it has come to dominate American politics.

Hodgson disputes the notion that the rise of conservatism has spread affluence and equality to the American people. Quite the contrary, he writes, the most distinctive feature of American society in the closing years of the twentieth century was its great and growing inequality. He argues that the combination of conservative ideology and corporate power and dominance by mass media obsessed with lifestyle and celebrity have caused America to abandon much of what was best in its past. In fact, he writes, income and wealth inequality have become so extreme that America now resembles the class-stratified societies of early twentieth-century Europe.

More Equal Than Others addresses a broad range of issues, with chapters on politics, the new economy, immigration, technology, women, race, and foreign policy, among others. A fitting sequel to the author's critically acclaimed America In Our Time, More Equal Than Others is not only an outstanding synthesis of history, but a trenchant commentary on the state of the American Dream.

Reviews:

"In More Equal Than Others, an up-to-the-minute critique of modern American life, the British historian Godfrey Hodgson combines intelligent discussions of pressures that have shaped American society during the last quarter-century . . . With a factoid-packed jeremiad against the triumph of the suburb--the demographic zone where half the population now lives, where two-thirds of new jobs are located, whose voting strength overawes Congress. . . . Although Hodgson writes as a liberal, he levels [his] charges across party lines."--Allen D. Boyer, New York Times Book Review

"[A] wonderfully written, wide-ranging and profoundly depressing book. Hodgson's theme is that the US has changed for the worse in the past 25 years: inequality is supplanting equality, even equality of opportunity."--Kathleen Burk, Financial Times

"[Hodgson] sees a country which the postwar liberal consensus has indeed moved right, turning free-market capitalism from an economic theory into a cultural template. The result is an America in which financial segregation increasingly preserves opportunity for a wealthy elite. . . . [He] argues convincingly that American society has come to resemble old-fashioned Europe, with its strictly class-structured elites."--Michael Carlson, The Spectator

"The most thoughtful, thorough and sorrowful book imaginable on what has happened in these years."--Bernard Crick, The Independent

More reviews

Table of Contents:

Foreword ix
Acknowledgments xiii
Introduction
Disappointment and Denial xvii
1 State of the Union 1
2 New Politics 29
3 New Technology 61
4 New Economics 87
5 New Immigrants 112
6 New Women 139
7 New South, Old Race 172
8 New Society 203
9 New World 249
10 New Century 288
Notes 305
Select Bibliography 349
Index 361

This book has been translated into:

  • French

Another Princeton book by Godfrey Hodgson:

Series:

Subject Areas:

A Century Foundation Book

Shopping Cart:

Paper $15.00
40% off regular price

Cloth $9.00
83% off regular price

Special online sale for customers in the U.S. & Canada only

For customers in the U.S., Canada, Latin America, Asia, and Australia

Paper: $24.95 ISBN13: 978-0-691-12767-5

Cloth: $52.50 ISBN13: 978-0-691-11788-1

For customers in Europe, Africa, the Middle East, and India

Paper: £14.95 ISBN13: 978-0-691-12767-5

Cloth: £30.95 ISBN13: 978-0-691-11788-1

Prices subject to change without notice

File created: 9/3/2008

Questions and comments to: webmaster@press.princeton.edu
Princeton University Press

ONLINE BOOK SALE
New Book E-Mails
New In Print
Subjects
Catalogs
Series
Sample Chapters
Podcasts/Vodcasts
Recent Awards
E-Books
Online Books
Online Ordering
For Reviewers
Permissions
Class Use
About Us
Contact Us
European Office
Links
F.A.Q.
Home Page
Send me emails
about new books in:
American History
Political Science and International Relations
More Choices
Email:
Country:
Name: