This volume offers a new perspective on American conservatism in
the 1960s and the way in which the changes of the decade shaped the
development of American politics for the next half-century.
Historians have increasingly begun to view the sixties as a decade
of conservatism, and a spate of landmark books in the field have
traced the careers of Barry Goldwater, Richard Nixon, Ronald
Reagan, and George Wallace. Much, however, is still unknown about
the growth of the conservative movement during this decade. In
their effort to chronicle the national politicians and
organizations that led the movement, previous histories of
conservatism neglected to examine lesser-known developments--local
perspectives, the role of religion, transnational dimensions--that
help to give clues to conservatism's enduring influence in American
politics. The contributions here provide a synthesis of
cutting-edge scholarship that addresses those overlooked
developments and offers new insights into the way that the 1960s
shaped the trajectory and contributed to the political power of
postwar conservatism.
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