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Chapter 26: Triumph of the Middle Class, 1945-1963 Big Idea: Why did consumerism become a focus of American culture and how did it impact American economics and society? 1. Postwar Prosperity and the Affluent Society A. Economy: From Recovery to Dominance B. A Nation of Consumers C. Youth Culture D. Religion and the Middle Class 2. The American Family in the Era of Containment A. The Baby Boom B. Women, Work and Family C. Challenging Middle Class Morality 3. A Suburban Nation A. The Postwar Housing Boom B. Rise of the Sunbelt C. Two Nations: Urban and Suburban Part 1: Postwar Prosperity and the Affluent Society Section 1A: Economy: From Economy to Dominance • The US economy grew steadily after WWII lowering inequality and creating a robust middle class but minorities and cities struggled • Bretton Woods system stabilized global economy benefiting the US • Cold War military spending (10% of GDP), the space race, and federal research dollars expanded the military-industrial complex • Corporate consolidation, automation, and hiring of white collar workers benefited the middle class but hurt the “Other America” Part 1: Postwar Prosperity and the Affluent Society Section 1B: A Nation of Consumers • • • • • Soaring consumption fueled by post-war demand and factors below GI Bill’s free tuition and guaranteed mortgages grew middle class Collective bargaining led to (temp.) fringe benefits for middle class Family emphasis focused consumption on cars, houses, children TV advertising increased consumption and reinforced cultural norms Part 1: Postwar Prosperity and the Affluent Society Section 1C: Youth Culture • Teen culture emerged as advertisers and movies targeted youth • Rock ’n’ roll music fed the rebelliousness many teens felt • The Beats expressed their alienation with the materialism and conformity of the 1950s foreshadowing 1960s cultural upheavals Part 1: Postwar Prosperity and the Affluent Society Section 1D: Religion and the Middle Class • Church membership jumped to a record 70% by 1960 due to atomic fears, emphasis on nuclear family and rise of new style evangelists • Evangelists condoned consumption and deftly used radio and TV • God was added to Pledge of Allegiance and US currency in 1950s New Jersey Phalanx building photograph Pt 2: The American Family in the Era of Containment Section 2A: The Baby Boom • • • • Renewed emphasis on domesticity clashed with longer term trends Drop in marriage age and economic boom led to 76 million new births Miracle drugs, vaccines, and educational spending benefitted kids Boomers have a significant effect on America and continue to do so Pt 2: The American Family in the Era of Containment Section 2B: Women, Work and Family • Women faced both the cultural ideal of domesticity vs. need to work, especially the working class, as well as discrimination and low pay • 400% increase in married working women in 1950s • 80% of women workers were in stereotypical jobs and averaged 60% of men’s pay Pt 2: The American Family in the Era of Containment Section 2C: Challenging Middle Class Morality • 1950s were a period of cultural conservatism: marriage, divorce, kids • Kinsey’s sex studies, a growing homophile movement and Playboy magazine demonstrated changing moral values under the surface Part 3: A Suburban Nation Section 3A: The Postwar Housing Boom • Levitt’s mass production of houses and FHA/VA insurance made housing affordable to middle class but minorities were usually excluded • Interstate highways killed many small towns but gave rise to suburbanization, malls, fast food • From 1945-1965, number of cars tripled • By 1960, 1/3 of Americans lived in suburbs 1st McDonald’s, 1955 Part 3: A Suburban Nation Section 3B: Rise of the Sunbelt • Millions moved to the Sunbelt due to better weather, cheap suburbs, low taxes and lots of jobs as resulting from heavy military spending • Aerospace, defense, electronics industries based in the Sunbelt Part 3: A Suburban Nation Section 3C: Two Societies: Urban and Suburban • Blacks and immigrants migrated to cities as whites fled to suburbs • An urban crisis created by white flight, poor infrastructure, discrimination, automation and urban renewal • Exclusion of Asian immigration ended • Mexicans, Puerto Ricans and Cubans came in large numbers Eleanor Roosevelt at the Tuskegee Institute Legal Immigration to the United States Robert Taylor Homes, Chicago