America in the 1950s

America in the 1950s
Author: Edmund Lindop
Publsiher: Twenty-First Century Books
Total Pages: 148
Release: 2009-09-01
Genre: Juvenile Nonfiction
ISBN: 9780822576426

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Outlines the important social, political, economic, cultural, and technological events that happened in the United States from 1950 to 1959.

Fat in the Fifties

Fat in the Fifties
Author: Nicolas Rasmussen
Publsiher: Johns Hopkins University Press
Total Pages: 199
Release: 2019-03-26
Genre: Medical
ISBN: 9781421428710

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Fat in the Fifties is required reading for public health practitioners and researchers, physicians, historians of medicine, and anyone concerned about weight and weight loss.

American Culture in the 1950s

American Culture in the 1950s
Author: Martin Halliwell
Publsiher: Edinburgh University Press
Total Pages: 336
Release: 2007-03-13
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9780748628902

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This book provides a stimulating account of the dominant cultural forms of 1950s America: fiction and poetry; theatre and performance; film and television; music and radio; and the visual arts. Through detailed commentary and focused case studies of influential texts and events - from Invisible Man to West Side Story, from Disneyland to the Seattle World's Fair, from Rear Window to The Americans - the book examines the way in which modernism and the cold war offer two frames of reference for understanding the trajectory of postwar culture. The two core aims of this volume are to chart the changing complexion of American culture in the years following World War II and to provide readers with a critical investigation of 'the 1950s'. The book provides an intellectual context for approaching 1950s American culture and considers the historical impact of the decade on recent social and cultural developments.

The Fifties

The Fifties
Author: James R. Gaines
Publsiher: Simon and Schuster
Total Pages: 288
Release: 2023-02-07
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 9781439101643

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An “exciting and enlightening revisionist history” (Walter Isaacson, #1 New York Times bestselling author) that upends the myth of the 1950s as a decade of conformity and celebrates a few solitary, brave, and stubborn individuals who pioneered the radical gay rights, feminist, civil rights, and environmental movements, from historian James R. Gaines. An “enchanting, beautifully written book about heroes and the dark times to which they refused to surrender” (Todd Gitlin, bestselling author of The Sixties). In a series of character portraits, The Fifties invokes the accidental radicals—people motivated not by politics but by their own most intimate conflicts—who sparked movements for change in their time and our own. Among many others, we meet legal pathfinder Pauli Murray, who was tortured by both her mixed-race heritage and her “in between” sexuality. Through years of hard work and self-examination, she turned her demons into historic victories. Ruth Bader Ginsburg credited her for the argument that made sex discrimination unconstitutional, but that was only one of her gifts to the 21st-century feminism. We meet Harry Hay, who dreamed of a national gay rights movement as early as the mid-1940s, a time when the US, Soviet Union, and Nazi Germany viewed gay people as subversives and mentally ill. And in perhaps the book’s unlikeliest pairing, we hear the prophetic voices of Silent Spring’s Rachel Carson and MIT’s preeminent mathematician, Norbert Wiener, who from their very different perspectives—she is in the living world, he in the theoretical one—converged on the then-heretical idea that our mastery over the natural world carried the potential for disaster. Their legacy is the environmental movement. The Fifties is an “inspiration…[and] a reminder of the hard work and personal sacrifice that went into fighting for the constitutional rights of gay people, Blacks, and women, as well as for environmental protection” (The Washington Post). The book carries the powerful message that change begins not in mass movements and new legislation but in the lives of the decentered, often lonely individuals, who learn to fight for change in a daily struggle with themselves.

The Fifties in America

The Fifties in America
Author: John C. Super
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 424
Release: 2005
Genre: Nineteen fifties
ISBN: UCSC:32106018510732

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Surveys the events and people of the United States and Canada from 1950 through 1959.

The American Dream

The American Dream
Author: Time-Life Books
Publsiher: Time Life Medical
Total Pages: 200
Release: 1998
Genre: History
ISBN: 0737002018

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Examines the politics, suburbia, automobiles, art and entertainment, cold war, television, and sports of the 1950s.

The Forgotten Fifties

The Forgotten Fifties
Author: James Conaway,Library of Congress
Publsiher: Skira
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2014
Genre: History, Modern
ISBN: 0847843734

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"From the archive of Look comes a photographic portrayal of the dynamic era that sparked a transformation in America's political and cultural identity. From the Red Scare incited by Joseph McCarthy to the election of John F. Kennedy as president in 1960, best-selling journalist James Conaway charts an entertaining and highly readable year-by-year survey through the fifties as it heralded some of the most striking and clashing aspects of twentieth-century America."--Dust jacket flap.

Becoming America s Playground

Becoming America s Playground
Author: Larry D. Gragg
Publsiher: University of Oklahoma Press
Total Pages: 390
Release: 2019-08-29
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780806165530

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In 1950 Las Vegas saw a million tourists. In 1960 it attracted ten million. The city entered the fifties as a regional destination where prosperous postwar Americans could enjoy vices largely forbidden elsewhere, and it emerged in the sixties as a national hotspot, the glitzy resort city that lights up the American West today. Becoming America’s Playground chronicles the vice and the toil that gave Las Vegas its worldwide reputation in those transformative years. Las Vegas’s rise was no happy accident. After World War II, vacationing Americans traveled the country in record numbers, making tourism a top industry in such states as California and Florida. The Las Vegas Chamber of Commerce saw its chance and developed a plan to capitalize on the town’s burgeoning reputation for leisure. Las Vegas pinned its hopes for the future on Americans’ need for escape. Transforming a vice city financed largely by the mob into a family vacation spot was not easy. Hotel and casino publicists closely monitored media representations of the city and took every opportunity to stage images of good, clean fun for the public—posing even the atomic bomb tests conducted just miles away as an attraction. The racism and sexism common in the rest of the nation in the era prevailed in Las Vegas too. The wild success of Frank Sinatra’s Rat Pack performances at the Sands Hotel in 1960 demonstrated the city’s slow progress toward equality. Women couldn’t work as dealers in Las Vegas until the 1970s, yet they found more opportunities for well-paying jobs there than many American women could find elsewhere. Gragg shows how a place like the Las Vegas Strip—with its glitz and vast wealth and its wildly public consumption of vice—rose to prominence in the 1950s, a decade of Cold War anxiety and civil rights conflict. Becoming America’s Playground brings this pivotal decade in Las Vegas into sharp focus for the first time.