Chapter 32
baby boom
12 million returning veterans contributed to this expansion of the next generation.
The Power of Positive Thinking
1952 book written by Reverend Norman Peale who spread his feel good theology
Dwight Eisenhower
34th president after Truman.
Levittown
A development on long island to create a suburb of NY. The Federal Housing Admin helped to keep these low cost
International Business Machines (IBM)
A large company that took part in the idea of moving workers in their company where they needed them. Jokingly nicknamed themselves "i've been moved"
The Great American Boom
A name for the growth and prosperity of America after WWII
Ralph Ellison
African American man that wrote Invisible Man in 1952 talking about a individual trapped in privacy
Richard Wright
African American writer commented on the unpreparedness of African Americans who moved to the city
cult of feminine domesticity
After WWII the role of women in the workplace greatly changed as family size increased and families tended to stay home with their children.
Serviceman's Readjustment Act of 1944
Also called the GI (government issue) bill of rights. This was racist. Didn't offer the same rights to whites as to African Americans
Jackson Pollock
An abstract expressionist artist to express modern ideas of society
Edward Hooper
Artist known for painting about desolate loneliness
George Meany
Became head of the AFL in 1955
Veteran's Administration
Created by the GI Bill of Rights. A government agency that dealt with retired war heroes after WWII
Willis Carrier
Created the air conditioner
Black migration
Describes a time during and after WWII where a large population of African Americans moved north to the cities.
"good news" religion
Describes the religious messages expressed during the 50s rather than the fire and brimstones was that explicitly ignored negative issues
white flight
During WWII African Americans moved north and midwest and as white families formed after the war, some moved into suburb areas to resist this change.
Under God, In Got We Trust
Eisenhower's push to spread his greatly religious ideals. Changed the pledge and the dollar
James Jones
Wrote From Here to Eternity in 1951 which talks about individualism in a time of mass conformity
John Galbraith
Wrote The Affluent Society in 1958 which challenged the idea that a good economy would solve social issues
John Keats
Wrote The Cracks in the Picture Window in 1956 which criticized the suburban life of being not that good
David Riesman
Wrote The Lonely Crowd in 1950. Inner directed v. outer directed people. Said we were becoming petty
The Beats
Young men that rebelled against the mundane middle class like Allen Ginsberg and Saul Bellow
rock and roll
a new kind of music that bridged the gap between blacks and whites
Alan Freed
coined rock and roll
Elvis Presley
hips
blue collar
hourly wage workers (lower class)
white collar
salaried workers (higher class)
Death of a Salesman
Play by Arthur Miller talking about the soullessness of business people
the silent generation
Refers to teens in the 50s who were very compliant and not rebellious
Norman Peale
Reverend who championed the "feel good theology"
C Wright Mills
Sociologist who wrote White Collar Society in 1951. Said that white collar workers were soulless people who just wanted money
automation
Technological advancements in industries. Machinery that helped to make products
neo-orthodoxy
Movement in the religious community that argued that the gospel of "good news" was just a way of sociability or "belonging," rather than a way of reorienting life toward God.
Sunbelt
Name for the urban population growth in the South from the Carolinas to California
Reinhold Niebuhr
Neo-orthodox preacher who wanted people to realize pain around them. CHALLENGED MORAL COMPLACENCY
William Levitt
New York developer. Built 10,600 houses on 1,200, acres