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The age of anxiety : McCarthyism to terrorism / Haynes Johnson.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Orlando, Fla. : Harcourt, Inc., 2005.Edition: 1st edDescription: xii, 609 p. : ill. ; 24 cmISBN:
  • 0151010625
Subject(s): LOC classification:
  • E748.M143 J64 2005
Online resources:
Contents:
Prologue: A new kind of war -- Pt. 1: McCarthyism. The list ; Tail Gunner Joe ; Progressivism to McCarthyism ; The remarkable upstart ; The way to Wheeling -- Pt. 2: The past as prologue. In the beginning ; Cold warriors -- Pt. 3: Dealing with a demagogue. The press ; The politicians ; The network ; The opposition ; The demagogue -- Pt. 4: Prelude to power. Twenty years of treason ; Taking more scalps ; Junketeering gumshoes -- Pt. 5: Witch hunts. Inquisitions ; The case of Private Schine ; Point or order! ; "Have you no shame, senator? -- Pt. 6: Judgment. Belling the cat ; Oblivion -- Pt. 7: Legacy. The politics of fear ; Parallels ; A house divided -- Epilogue: The age of anxiety.
Summary: For five long years in the 1950s, Senator Joseph McCarthy and his anti-Communist crusade dominated the American scene, terrified politicians, and destroyed the lives of thousands of citizens. Haynes Johnson re-creates that time of crisis--of President Eisenhower, who hated McCarthy but would not attack him; of the Republican senators who cynically used McCarthy to win their own elections; of Edward R. Murrow, whose courageous TV broadcast began McCarthy's downfall; and of mild-mannered lawyer Joseph Welch, who finally shamed McCarthy into silence. Johnson tells this monumental story through the lens of its relevance to our own time, when fear again affects American behavior and attitudes, for he believes now, as then, that our civil liberties, our Constitution, and our nation are at stake as we confront the ever more difficult task of balancing the need for national security with that of personal liberty.--From publisher description.
Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Copy number Status Barcode
Circulating Book Collection Circulating Book Collection Albright College Library Stacks General collection 973.918 J67a (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 31856002092391
Total holds: 0
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973.918 H323 Harry S. Truman and the bomb : a documentary history / 973.918 H551j Joseph McCarthy : 973.918 J43t 2007 A time of paradox. 973.918 J67a The age of anxiety : 973.918 L257j Joseph McCarthy : 973.918 L928f The future of American politics. 973.918 M133t Truman /

"A James H. Silberman book."

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Prologue: A new kind of war -- Pt. 1: McCarthyism. The list ; Tail Gunner Joe ; Progressivism to McCarthyism ; The remarkable upstart ; The way to Wheeling -- Pt. 2: The past as prologue. In the beginning ; Cold warriors -- Pt. 3: Dealing with a demagogue. The press ; The politicians ; The network ; The opposition ; The demagogue -- Pt. 4: Prelude to power. Twenty years of treason ; Taking more scalps ; Junketeering gumshoes -- Pt. 5: Witch hunts. Inquisitions ; The case of Private Schine ; Point or order! ; "Have you no shame, senator? -- Pt. 6: Judgment. Belling the cat ; Oblivion -- Pt. 7: Legacy. The politics of fear ; Parallels ; A house divided -- Epilogue: The age of anxiety.

For five long years in the 1950s, Senator Joseph McCarthy and his anti-Communist crusade dominated the American scene, terrified politicians, and destroyed the lives of thousands of citizens. Haynes Johnson re-creates that time of crisis--of President Eisenhower, who hated McCarthy but would not attack him; of the Republican senators who cynically used McCarthy to win their own elections; of Edward R. Murrow, whose courageous TV broadcast began McCarthy's downfall; and of mild-mannered lawyer Joseph Welch, who finally shamed McCarthy into silence. Johnson tells this monumental story through the lens of its relevance to our own time, when fear again affects American behavior and attitudes, for he believes now, as then, that our civil liberties, our Constitution, and our nation are at stake as we confront the ever more difficult task of balancing the need for national security with that of personal liberty.--From publisher description.

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