Friday, May 17, 2019

A Fierce Discontent

Indiana University Michael McGerr chronicles the development and eventual damp of the American progressive driving force in his 2003 work, A tearing Discontent The Rise and Fall of the reformist Movement in America, 1870-1920. He employs various literary techniques in his attempt to draw the reader into the creative activity that was America at the end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th centuries. More than a simple retelling of diachronic events, the book seeks to allow the reader to catch a glimpse of the emotions that swirled around at the time.Not only does McGerr strive an insight into the lives of all the key players in the historical drama, but McGerr allows the reader to see an image of what lifespan was like for the people who did not make it to the cover of history books, poor utmostmers and inter-city immigrants. McGerrs book captures far more angles than you would expect it to. A Fierce Discontent is filled with many of the authors let convictions roughly th e progressive era and the legacy it would leave.McGerr interestingly asserts that the excesses and overly-fervent radicalism of many of the leaders of the progressive movement would be responsible for events such as the Communist scare of the 1920s, the popularity of eugenics and racial tension in the coming decades. He uses the term coercively reform to describe the actions some radical progressives took in trying to affect the lives of the lower classes and in the end concludes that the folly of the progressive movement was in the fact that, reformers should not try too much. Furthermore, it is interesting to peck the McGerr believes that the meteoric fall of the progressive movement is still affecting our society and government today. He sees the go wrong of the progressive movement and its consequences as foreshadowing the overly liberal policies of Lyndon Johnsons Great Society and the revivification of American conservatism. When one looks at the political reality of both situations, there seems to be a whiz of parallelism.The progressive administrations of Theodore Roosevelt, Taft, and Wilson gave way to the laissez-faire conservatism of Harding, Coolidge, and Hoover. Similarly, the New Deal began by Franklin Roosevelt and continued by Kennedy and Johnson clique the table for the Reagan Revolution. There is certainly a discernible economic pattern that exists between the cardinal situations, although there seems to be noticeable societal differences. This can be attributed to the changing nature of what being cautious has come to mean in America.Whereas it was the progressives who fought so hard for prohibition and other defenses of morality, it would be the Reagan-era conservatives that would sway up these causes a little more than half a century later. Another, and perhaps questionable, aspect of McGerrs depiction is his vary assertion that the American progressive movement can be traced back to 1870. some historians date the formation of t he American progressive movement to the early 1890s.No where does McGerr rationalize the decision to date the movement to 1870, as there is almost no discussion of events or people before the early 1890s. art object minor in the context of the whole work, it is unusual that such a seemingly arbitrary date was given for the origins of a critical blockage in American history. A Fierce Discontent is good enjoyable, a fact that is greatly contributed to by the authors deliberate attempts to draw the reader into the period of history that McGerr is describing.Additionally, it is extremely comprehensive, covering each and every strike, robber baron, and anti-trust act you could possibly bring or want to know about. While some of McGerrs assertions seem to be questionable at times, He effectively brings to life the period around the turn to the 20th century, and makes the reader think about some of the lasting effects this turbulent time might have put into play. Bibliography McGerr, Mi chael, A Fierce Discontent The Rise and Fall of the American Progressive Movement,1870-1920, 2nd edition, Oxford University Press, 2005.

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