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Freedom from Want - American Liberalism and the Idea of the Consumer (Paperback, Revised)
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Freedom from Want - American Liberalism and the Idea of the Consumer (Paperback, Revised)
Series: New Studies in American Intellectual and Cultural History
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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In 1941, Franklin Delano Roosevelt identified "four essential human
freedoms." Three of these-freedom from fear, freedom of speech, and
freedom of religion-had long been understood as defining principles
of liberalism. Roosevelt's fourth freedom-freedom from want-was
not. Indeed, classic liberals had argued that the only way to
guarantee this freedom would be through an illiberal redistribution
of wealth. In Freedom from Want, Kathleen G. Donohue describes how,
between the 1880s and the 1940s, American intellectuals transformed
classical liberalism into its modern American counterpart by
emphasizing consumers over producers and consumption over
production. Donohue first examines this conceptual shift through
the writings of a wide range of late-nineteenth- and
early-twentieth-century social critics-among them William Graham
Sumner, Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Richard T. Ely, Edward Bellamy,
and Thorstein Veblen-who rethought not only the negative
connotations of consumerism but also the connection between one's
right to consume and one's role in the production process. She then
turns to the politicization of these ideas beginning with the
establishment of a more consumer-oriented liberalism by Walter
Lippmann and Walter Weyl and ending in the New Deal era, when this
debate evolved from intellectual discourse into public policy with
the creation of such bodies as the National Recovery Administration
and the Agricultural Adjustment Administration. Deftly combining
intellectual, cultural, and political history, Freedom from Want
sheds new light on the ways in which Americans reconceptualized the
place of the consumer in society and the implications of these
shifting attitudes for the philosophy ofliberalism and the role of
government in safeguarding the material welfare of the people.
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