American Experiment (449 page)

Read American Experiment Online

Authors: James MacGregor Burns

BOOK: American Experiment
9.96Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

[
Boyer and Hechinger on higher education
]: Boyer and Hechinger, esp. p. 3.

598
[“
American liberal approach
”]: Walzer, “Teaching Morality,”
New Republic,
vol. 178, no. 23 (June 10, 1978), pp. 12-14, quoted at p. 13; see also Roger L. Shinn, “Education in Values: Acculturation and Exploration,” in Douglas Sloan, ed.,
Education and Values
(Teachers College Press, 1980), pp. 111-22.

[
Debates over values
]: James MacGregor Burns,
Leadership
(Harper, 1978), pp. 74-75; see also Milton Rokeach,
Beliefs, Altitudes, and Values: A Theory of Organization and Change
(Jossey-Bass, 1969); Burns,
Uncommon Sense
(Harper, 1972), ch. 6.

[“
The most resonant
”]: Bellah et al.,
Habits,
p. 23.

598-9
[“
Decline of church
”]: Merelman, pp. 1-2.

599
[“
May have grown cancerous
”]: Bellah et al.,
Habits,
p. viii.

[
Yuppies
]: “The Year of the Yuppie,”
Newsweek,
vol. 104, no. 28 (December 31, 1984), pp. 14-20; “Life of a Yuppie Takes a Psychic Toll,”
U.S. News & World Report,
vol. 98, no. 16 (April 29, 1985), pp.73-74; “That Word,”
New Yorker,
vol.61. no.10 (April 29, 1985), pp. 30-31.

[
Sheila
]: Bellah et al.,
Habits,
pp. 220-21, quoted at p. 221.

[“
Management of personal impressions
”]: Christopher Lasch,
The Culture of Narcissism: American Life in an Age of Diminishing Expectations
(Norton, 1978), p. 44; see also Lasch,
The Minimal Self: Psychic Survival in Troubled Times
(Norton, 1984).

600
[
Individualism
]: Crawford B. Macpherson,
The Political Theory of Possessive Individualism: Hobbes to Locke
(Oxford University Press, 1962): A. D. Lindsay, “Individualism,” in Edwin R. A. Seligman, ed.,
Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences
(Macmillan, 1930-34), vol. 7, pp. 674-80; Steven Lukes,
Individualism
(Basil Blackwell, 1973); Isaiah Berlin, “Two Concepts of Liberty,” in Berlin,
Four Essays on Liberty
(Oxford University Press, 1969), pp. 118-72; Karl R. Popper,
The Open Society and Its Enemies
(Princeton University Press, 1950); Bellah et al.,
Habits,
esp. chs. 2, 6.

601

Nation that was proud
”]:
Carter Public Papers,
vol. 3, part 2, p. 1237.

Kinesis: The Southern Californians

[
Hollywood

s beginnings
]: Carey McWilliams,
Southern California: An Island on the Land
(Peregrine Smith, 1979), ch. 16; Lary Linden May, “Reforming Leisure: The Birth of Mass Culture and the Motion Picture Industry, 1896-1920,” (doctoral dissertation; University of California, Los Angeles, 1977); Robert Sklar,
Movie-Made America: A Social History of the American Movies
(Random House, 1975), chs. 2-3; W. H. Hutchinson,
California: The Golden Shore by the Sundown Sea
(Star Publishing, 1980), pp. 247-54; see also Hortense Powdermaker,
Hollywood, the Dream Factory
(Little, Brown, 1950), chs. 1, 15.

[
Selznick

s wire to the Czar
]: Walton Bean,
California: An Interpretive History,
2nd ed. (McGraw-Hill, 1973), p. 384.

602
[“
Monopolistic non-seasonal industry
”]: McWilliams,
Southern California,
pp. 339-40, quoted at p. 340.

[
Southern California

s migrants
]: McWilliams,
Southern California,
chs. 3, 5, 7-9, 15
passim;
see also Robert F. Heifer and Alan F. Almquist,
The Other Californians
(University of California Press, 1971).

[Birth of a Nation]: McWilliams,
Southern California,
pp. 332-33; Michael Paul Rogin,
Ronald Reagan, the Movie, and Other Episodes in Political Demonology
(University of California Press, 1987), pp. 190-235; Sklar, ch. 4: Charles Higham,
The Art of the American film, 1900-1971
(Doubleday, 1973), pp. 10-12.

[
Labor strife in Los Angeles
]: Andrew F. Rolle,
California
(Crowell,1964), ch. 31. 602-3 [“
Kiss-Kiss

and

bang-bang
”]: Powdermaker, p. 14.

603
[
Priestley on Los Angeles
]: quoted in McWilliams,
Southern California,
p. 328; see also Robert Kirsch, “The Cultural Scene,” in Carey McWilliams, ed.,
The California Revolution
(Grossman, 1968), p. 205.

[
Esoteric religions in southern California
]: Carey McWilliams, “California: Mecca of the Miraculous,” in Dennis Hale and Jonathan Eisen, eds.,
The California Dream
(Collier Books, 1968), pp. 279-92; Michael Davie,
California: The Vanishing Dream
(Dodd, Mead, 1972), ch. 8; McWilliams,
Southern California,
ch. 13; Lately Thomas,
Storming Heaven
(Morrow, 1970).

603-4
[
Left-wing California politics
]: Dorothy Healey, “Tradition’s Chains Have Bound Us” (1982), Oral History, Research Library, University of California at Los Angeles; Carey McWilliams, “The Economics of Extremism,” in Hale and Eisen, pp. 83-95.

604
[
Olson]:
Robert E. Burke,
Olson

s New Deal for California
(University of Califomia Press, 1953), esp. chs. 3, 5.

[
California political culture
]: Luther Whiteman and Samuel L. Lewis, “EPIC, or Politics for Use,” in Hale and Eisen, pp. 63-71; McWilliams,
Southern California,
ch. 14; Gladwin Hill, “California Politics,” in McWilliams,
California Revolution,
pp. 172-84; Davie, chs. 6-7; James Q. Wilson, “The Political Culture of Southern California,” in Hale and Eisen, pp. 215-33.

[
Young Nixon
]: Fawn M. Brodie,
Richard Nixon: The Shaping of His Character
(Norton, 1981), chs. 2-8; Garry Wills,
Nixon Agonistes: The Crisis of the Self-Made Man
(Houghton Mifflin, 1970), pp. 150-86; Davie, pp. 88-90.

[
Wills on Nixon
]: Wills,
Nixon Agonistes,
p. 184.

[“
Old-fashioned kind of lawyer
”]: quoted in Bruce Mazlish,
In Search of Nixon
(Basic Books, 1972), p. 28.

[
Hollywood in 1930s and 1940s
]: Otto Friedrich,
City of Nets: A Portrait of Hollywood in
t
he 1940

s
(Harper, 1986); Higham, parts 2-3
passim;
Tino Balio, ed.,
The American Film Industry,
rev. ed. (University of Wisconsin Press, 1985), part 3; Charles Higham and Joel Greenberg,
Hollywood in the Forties
(Tantivy Press, 1968); Larry Ceplair and Steven Englund,
The Inquisition in Hollywood: Politics in the Film Community, 1930-1960
(University of California Press, 1983).

605
[
Writers in Hollywood
]: Walter Goodman, “Why Some Novelists Cast Hollywood as the Heavy,”
New York Times,
August 17, 1986, sect. 2, pp. 19-20; Friedrich, pp. 228-46, esp. pp. 237-40; Harry M. Geduld, ed.,
Authors on Film
(Indiana University Press, 1972), esp. parts 3-4; Morris Beja,
Film and Literature
(Longman, 1979), part 1.

[“
Puke-green phantasmagoria
”]: quoted in Goodman, “Why Some Novelists,” p. 20.

[
Gable-Faulkner exchange
]: quoted in Friedrich, p. 240.

[
Hollywood and television
]: Tino Balio, “Retrenchment, Reappraisal, and Reorganization, 1948,” in Balio, pp. 422-38; David J. Londoner, “The Changing Economics of Entertainment,” in
ibid.,
pp. 603-30; Andrew Dowdy,
The Films of the Fifties: The American State of Mind
(Morrow, 1973), ch. 1
passim;
Douglas Gomery, “Brian’s Song: Television, Hollywood, and the Evolution of the Movie Made for Television,” in John E. O’Connor, ed.,
American History of American Television
(Frederick Ungar, 1983), ch. 9. [
Movie admissions
]: Douglas Gomery, “Hollywood’s Business,”
Wilson Quarterly,
vol. 10, no. 3 (Summer 1986), p. 53.

606
[
Reagan

s youth)
: Ronald Reagan and Richard G. Hubler,
Where

s the Rest of Me? The Autobiography of Ronald Reagan
(Karz Publishers, 1981), chs. 1-4; Anne Edwards,
Early Reagan: The Rise to Power
(Morrow, 1987), chs. 2-7; Garry Wills,
Reagan

s America: Innocents at Home
(Doubleday, 1987), parts 1-3.

[
Reagan in Hollywood
]: Reagan and Hubler, pp. 71-243; Edwards, chs. 8-21; Wills,
Reagan

s America,
part 4; Rogin, ch. 1.

[
Powdermaker on Hollywood escapism
]: Powdermaker, pp. 12-14, quoted at pp. 12-13.

[
Production Code Administration and censorship
]: Powdermaker, ch. 3
passim;
see also Richard S. Randall,
Censorship of the Movies: The Social and Political Control of a Mass Medium
(University of Wisconsin Press, 1968).

607
[“
A scoop for you!
”]: quoted in Wills,
Reagan

s America,
p. 159.

[“
So much that is right
”]:
ibid.,
p. 161,

[
Reagan, SAG, and MCA
]:
ibid.,
chs. 23-29, esp. pp. 249-50, 272-74; Edwards, chs. 14-17, 21
passim;
Reagan and Hubler, pp. 222-30, 275-88.

[
Reagan

s movement across political spectrum
]: Wills,
Reagan

s America,
esp. pp. 257-58, 283-84; Robert Dallek,
Ronald Reagan: The Politics of Symbolism
(Harvard University Press, 1984), pp. 23-28; Lou Cannon,
Reagan
(Putnam, 1982), chs. 7-8
passim.

[
Cannon on income tax and Reagan

s new conservatism
]: Cannon, p. 91.

607-8
[
Hollywood in the 1960s-1980s
]: Gomery, pp. 56-57; Robin Wood,
Hollywood from Vietnam to Reagan
(Columbia University Press, 1986); Balio, “Retrenchment.”

608
[
Development of southern California
]: Charles Lockwood and Christopher B. Leinberger, “Los Angeles Comes of Age,”
Atlantic,
vol. 261, no. 1 (January 1988), pp. 31-56; B. Marchand,
The Emergence of Los Angeles: Population and Homing in the City of Dreams, 1940-1970
(Pion Limited, 1986); McWilliams,
California Revolution;
Davie, chs. 3-4.

608
[
The auto in southern California
]: Los Angeles
Times,
April 19, 1987, part 1, pp. 1, 20-22, and part 6, pp. 1, 6; Richard G. Lillard, “Revolution by Internal Combustion,” in McWilliams,
California Revolution,
pp. 84-99; Samuel E. Wood, “The Freeway Revolt and What It Means,” in
ibid.,
pp. 100-9;
New York Times,
August 21, 1987, p. A8; Davie, pp. 53-62.

[“
A movable home
”]: quoted in Los Angeles
Times,
April 19, 1987, part 6, p. 6.

Superspectatorship

[
Hagler-Leonard
]:
Sports Illustrated,
vol. 66, no. 13 (March 30, 1987), pp. 58-78;
ibid.,
vol. 66, no. 16 (April 13, 1987), pp. 18-25;
New York Times,
April 6, 1987, pp. C1, C6.

610
[
Sportswatching
]:
Statistical Abstract,
p. 216 (Table 375); see also Allen Guttmann,
Sports Spectators
(Columbia University Press, 1986]:
passim;
Dick Schaap, “Sports and Television: The Perfect Marriage,” in Marvin Barrett, ed.,
The Politics of Broadcasting
(Crowell, 1973), pp. 197-202.

[
Podell on sportswatching
]: Podell, “Preface,” in Podell, ed.,
Sports in America
(H. W. Wilson Co., 1986), pp. 5-6, quoted at p. 5.

[“
Wholly intelligible
”]: Larry Gerlach, “Telecommunications and Sports,” in Podell, pp. 66-74, quoted at p. 73.

[
Lipsky on sports
]: Lipsky,
How We Play the Game: Why Sports Dominate American Life
(Beacon Press, 1981), p. 63.

611
[“
Agitate a bag of wind
”]: quoted in Gerlach, p. 72.

[
Advertising rate for 1988 football championship
]:
New York Times,
January 25, 1988, p. C7.

[
Football and baseball TV contracts
]: Robert Kilborn. Jr., “Trying to Limit Out-of-the-Ballpark Salaries in Professional Sports,” in Podell, pp. 74-77, esp. p. 75. [
1984 Olympics

economic impact
]: Roger Rosenblatt, “Why We Play These Games,” in
ibid,
pp. 135-43, esp. p. 35.

[
Bird

s worth
]: Kilborn, p. 76.

[
TV advertising
]: W. Russell Neuman,
The Paradox of Mass Politics
(Harvard University Press, 1986), p. 145; see Todd Gitlin, “Car Commercials and
Miami Vice:
‘We Build Excitement,’“ in Gitlin, ed.,
Watching Television
(Pantheon, 1986), pp. 136-61;
Statistical Abstract,
pp. 538 (Table 926), 539 (Tables 928-30).

[“
Economics of television
”]: Neuman, p. 135.

612
[Wall Street Journal
circulation
]: James MacGregor Burns, J. W. Peltason, and Thomas E. Cronin,
Government By the People,
13th ed. (Prentice-Hall, 1987), p. 244 (table).

[USA Today]: Peter Prichard,
The Making of McPaper: The Inside Story of USA Today
(Andrews, McMeel & Parker, 1987).

[
Media concentration
]: Michael Parenti,
Inventing Reality: The Politics of the Mass Media
(St. Martin’s Press, 1986), pp. 27-32, esp. p. 27; see also Ben H. Bagdikian,
The Media Monopoly
(Beacon Press, 1983).

[
Broder on the press
]: Broder,
Behind the Front Page: A Candid Look at How the News Is Made
(Simon and Schuster, 1987), p. 12.

Other books

Napoleón en Chamartín by Benito Pérez Galdós
You're Still the One by Jacobs, Annabel
Bloodeye by Craig Saunders
Mortals & Deities by Maxwell Alexander Drake
Maybe Baby by Lani Diane Rich
Fool Me Once by Harlan Coben
The Private Eye by Jayne Ann Krentz, Dani Sinclair, Julie Miller