The Age of Reagan: A History, 1974-2008 by Sean Wilentz

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(Compact Disc - Unabridged, 18 CDs, 22 hours)

  • Publisher: Tantor Media, Inc.
  • Pub. Date: June 2008
  • ISBN-13: 9781400107582
  • Sales Rank: 126,880
  • Edition Description: Unabridged, 18 CDs, 22 hours
 
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The Barnes & Noble Review

Princeton history professor Sean Wilentz takes no prisoners. He has ranked George W. Bush among the absolute worst presidents and faulted Barack Obama’s media supporters as dupes of "instinct" politics; in the 1990s he mixed it up with right-wingers trying to bring down President Clinton. Equally at home commenting on hip trends in music, social criticism, race relations, and current politics, Wilentz combines the reflexes of a street fighter with the formidable apparatus of American scholarship. In this work, which follows on the success of The Rise of American Democracy, his well-received earlier effort to contextualize Jefferson and Jackson in pre–Civil War America, Wilentz attempts to place Ronald Reagan’s reinvigoration of the conservative movement and his presidency in the broad sweep of post-Watergate America.

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Synopsis

One of the nation's leading historians offers a groundbreaking and provocative chronicle of America's political history since the fall of Nixon.

The past thirty-five years have marked an era of conservatism. Although briefly interrupted in the late 1970s and temporarily reversed in the 1990s, a powerful surge from the right has dominated American politics and government. In The Age of Reagan, Sean Wilentz accounts for how a conservative movement once deemed marginal managed to seize power and hold it, and the momentous consequences that followed.

Ronald Reagan has been the single most important political figure of this age. Without Reagan, the conservative movement would have never been as successful as it was. In his political persona as well as his policies, Reagan embodied a new fusion of deeply right-leaning politics with some of the rhetoric and even a bit of the spirit of Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal and John F. Kennedy's New Frontier. In American political history there have been a few leading figures who, for better or worse, have placed their political stamp indelibly on their times. They include Thomas Jefferson, Andrew Jackson, Abraham Lincoln, Theodore Roosevelt, Franklin D. Roosevelt—and Ronald Reagan. A conservative hero in a conservative age, Reagan has been so admired by a minority of historians and so disliked by the others that it has been difficult to evaluate his administration with detachment. Drawing on numerous primary documents that have been neglected or only recently released to the public, as well as on emerging historical work, Wilentz offers invaluable revelations about conservatism'sascendancy and the era in which Reagan was the preeminent political figure.

Vivid, authoritative, and illuminating from start to finish, The Age of Reagan raises profound questions and opens passionate debate about our nation's recent past.

The Washington Post - Kevin Phillips

Wilentz deserves kudos for biting off a challenge that few historians would have dared to undertake. All too many U.S. political chronicles have been written by specialists who present events in four- or eight-year segments minimally encumbered by a larger economic, political or historical context. By contrast, Wilentz goes for sweep, and in a number of ways achieves it.

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Biography

Sean Wilentz is the author of The Rise of American Democracy, which won the Bancroft Prize and was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize. Wilentz teaches American history at Princeton University. He lives in Princeton, New Jersey.

Customer Reviews

A disappointing recitation of Liberal mythology.by Anonymous

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September 25, 2008: While I expected a liberal bias from Sean Willentz after having read his, The Rise of American Democracy, I did expect a more thoughtful and balanced analysis of this era. Instead, this is mostly a rehash of what I read in the papers and watched on the network news which repeats a leftist mythology in which Republicans and conservatives are manipulative connivers who use underhanded political maneuvers to defeat poor well meaning Democratic candidates in elections. His use of labels of people which hinder Democratic ambitions, such as 'the abusive ultraconservative editorial page of the Wall Street Journal' and 'The oddball, independent, third party candidacy of the billionaire Ross Perot,' underscore his lack of objectivity. Even if one believes that such descriptions may be accurate he owes the reader at least some illustrations or evidence for such labels. By writing such a shallow and biased chronicle of the times Wilentz misses the opportunity to offer any valid insight into the conservative revolution which would explain why during the last three decades more voters found conservative ideas more appealing than the liberal ideas which had dominated American politics between FDR and Reagan. In his previous work, The Rise of American Democracy, Wilentz proves that he is capable of writing thoughtful and insightful history, but in The Age of Reagan he fails noticeably.

A liberal bias bookby Anonymous

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August 04, 2008: I was fooled by the title of this book. Mr. Wilentz is a liberal who bashes Reagan and Bush. I should have suspected something when Mr. Wilentz indicates that the Supreme Court chose the president in 2000. I have a question for Mr. Wilentz, what would have happened if the Supreme Court allowed the Florida recount to continue? The same result as three news organizations concluded after they did a recount - Bush won Florida, and the presidency. If you want a liberal bias view of the political history from 1974 to 2008, then this book is a good one. Unfortunate, Mr. Wilentz doesn't give President Reagan the credit he deserves.


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