Pursuing the American Dream: Opportunity and Exclusion Over Four Centuries

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Author: Cal Jillson

ISBN-10: 0700613420

ISBN-13: 9780700613427

Category: Economic Conditions

Life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness: these words have long represented the promise of America. Touted by poets, pundits, and politicians, the American Dream is the spark that animates American life, the promise held out to youngsters and immigrants that hard work will result in security and prosperity.\ The reality of that Dream, however, has long depended on the circumstances of the dreamer, since many have been effectively barred from pursuing it. In this book Cal Jillson examines...

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"Everyone knows about the American dream-but no one has ever explored it quite like Jillson in this bold, luminous, smart, and splendid book."—James A. Morone, author of Hellfire Nation: The Politics of Sin in American History"Jillson challenges us to consider whether we are currently living up to the historic promise of the American Dream in an era of both increasing diversity and inequality."—Robert Wuthnow, author of Poor Richard's Principle: Recovering the American Dream "Jillson's book is full of startling new ideas that make sense."—Juan Williams, NPR Senior Correspondent "A sweeping, sobering narrative that should have broad appeal."—Andrew Burstein, author of Sentimental Democracy Author Biography: Cal Jillson is professor of political science at Southern Methodist University, where he served as Director of the John G. Tower Center for Political Studies from 1995 to 2001. His previous books include Congressional Dynamics: Structure, Coordination and Choice in the First American Congress, 1774-1789 and Constitution-Making: Conflict and Consensus in the Federal Convention of 1787. Publishers Weekly This ambitious work is the first on its subject: a history of the sense of promise that has animated American life since its beginning. The dream of opportunity and liberation from Old World shackles arrived, Jillson shows, with the first ships and spread across the land and into every heart. But the dream was sustained by more than ideas and yearnings: as Jillson, a political scientist at Southern Methodist University, illustrates in the freshest part of his book, the dream was gradually embodied in institutions, laws and practices. Yet, as Jillson is also at pains to point out, often in numbing detail, the dream always fell short of reality by excluding some people and discriminating against others. Jillson arrives at this unsurprising conclusion through an exhaustive review of the writings of religious and political thinkers. But what opportunities he's missed! No foreigners' views of the American dream, no playwrights, films, humor or caricatures. Such coverage, if substituted for some other weighty material, might have lent greater variety and lightness to a frequently tedious exposition. One final problem, from which an American author writing about the American dream can't escape: he assumes the worth of the ideal he analyzes. The full history of the American Dream will have to be written by someone from somewhere else. 29 b&w photos. (Sept.) Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

1The American dream and its role in American history12American dreams : the promise of life in the new world153The dream defined : the founding visions of Crevecoeur, Jefferson, and Hamilton484The dream expanded : the democratizing visions of Jackson and Lincoln835The dream threatened : individualism in the age of the robber barons1196The dream defended : the age of reform from TR to FDR1577The dream at high tide : opportunity to entitlement from Truman to LBJ1968The dream at ebb tide : entitlement to responsibility from Reagan to Clinton2319The American dream in the twenty-first century266

\ Publishers WeeklyThis ambitious work is the first on its subject: a history of the sense of promise that has animated American life since its beginning. The dream of opportunity and liberation from Old World shackles arrived, Jillson shows, with the first ships and spread across the land and into every heart. But the dream was sustained by more than ideas and yearnings: as Jillson, a political scientist at Southern Methodist University, illustrates in the freshest part of his book, the dream was gradually embodied in institutions, laws and practices. Yet, as Jillson is also at pains to point out, often in numbing detail, the dream always fell short of reality by excluding some people and discriminating against others. Jillson arrives at this unsurprising conclusion through an exhaustive review of the writings of religious and political thinkers. But what opportunities he's missed! No foreigners' views of the American dream, no playwrights, films, humor or caricatures. Such coverage, if substituted for some other weighty material, might have lent greater variety and lightness to a frequently tedious exposition. One final problem, from which an American author writing about the American dream can't escape: he assumes the worth of the ideal he analyzes. The full history of the American Dream will have to be written by someone from somewhere else. 29 b&w photos. (Sept.) Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.\ \ \ \ \ Library JournalJillson (political science, Southern Methodist Univ.) is the author of several books on U.S. political thought. Here, he traces the development and evolution of the American dream over the past four centuries. He contends that the idea of the American dream shapes our national identity: the United States represents the land of opportunity, a chance for a better life, and social advancement that can be achieved through education, moral character, and hard work. Jillson explains that the dream endures despite the exclusion of certain groups at various times and asserts that government policy and legislation have been vital avenues for expanding the American dream, irrespective of race, gender, and ethnicity, into the 21st century. Jillson includes an extensive bibliography of primary and secondary sources like those found in Zachary Karabell's A Visionary Nation: Four Centuries of American Dreams and What Lies Ahead and Jim Cullen's The American Dream: A Short History of an Idea That Shaped a Nation. Highly recommended for academic libraries. Gayla Koerting, Univ. of South Dakota Lib., Vermillion Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.\ \