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How We Got Here: The 70's: The Decade That Brought You Modern Life--For Better or Worse
 
 
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How We Got Here: The 70's: The Decade That Brought You Modern Life--For Better or Worse (Paperback)

~ (Author) "AT THE CLIMAX OF THE 1947 FILM CLASSIC, MIRACLE ON 34TH STREET, THE hero-a young lawyer determined to prove that a man who claims to..." (more)
Key Phrases: one white male, United States, New York, Supreme Court (more...)
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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

In a relentlessly smart book full of colorful anecdotes and deft pop-culture references, author David Frum describes the social convulsions of the 1970s: "We live in a world made new, and made new not by new machines, but by new feelings, new thoughts, new manners, new ways." The 1960s have a reputation as America's turning-point decade, but Frum convincingly argues that the 10 years following mattered more. The 1970s, he writes, "left behind a country that was more dynamic, more competitive, more tolerant; less deferential, less self-confident, less united; more socially equal, less economically equal; more expressive, more risk-averse, more sexual; less literate, less polite, less reticent."

The precise dates of this transformation are not as important as the reasons behind it, however, and the explanation in How We Got Here for what happened is both original and compelling. He says America's midcentury confidence was an anomaly. At some point, "the rebellion of an unmilitary people against institutions and laws formed by a century of war and the preparation for war" was inevitable. Rather than pondering why Americans trust their public institutions today less than they did during the Watergate revelations, for instance, Frum turns the question on its head: Why was the trust so high previous to that experience? His narrative describing the dizzy whirl of progress is absorbing, and his warning against both the nostalgic myths of the past and the uncritical acceptance of recent change is wise. How We Got Here also has a perfect title: there may not be a better book available on the broad currents of American social life in the second half of the 20th century. --John J. Miller --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.



From Publishers Weekly

In a new twist on the belief of many conservatives that the 1960s was the beginning of the end of a righteous and moral America, Frum, a contributing editor at the Weekly Standard, aims "to describe--and to judge" the transformation of American values during the '70s. Surveying politics, legal cases and opinion polls as well as popular culture, he links what he sees as America's loss of faith in government, the rise of "sourness and cynicism" and the culture of licentiousness and divorce, among other social changes, to events in that decade. Frum can be perceptive, as when he notes that Betty Ford's confession of her drug dependencies represented a major breakthrough in the discussion of private problems by public figures or when he considers how the "language of marriage" changed as "husbands and wives" gave way to "spouses" and then "partners." Yet his insights are often undercut by scornful assertions: e.g., that Ford "may have believed she was rendering a public service," but she opened the door to a "let's talk about me!" culture; or that linguistic changes eroded the family. Until his final chapter of overt political analysis--in which he asserts that "it was better when more people showed more loyalty to family and country... talked about themselves less, [and] restrained their sexuality"--Frum writes a popular history, although his disdain for those he does not agree with constantly shows through (e.g., he belittles Jane Fonda and Meryl Steep for daring to call themselves "artists" and suggests that Steve Martin is not funny). Filled with shaky, often unfootnoted facts and a palpable dislike for social change, this attempt at evenhanded social science devolves into a polemic that is likely to infuriate all but the most conservative readers. (Feb.)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 421 pages
  • Publisher: Basic Books (November 20, 2000)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0465041965
  • ISBN-13: 978-0465041961
  • Product Dimensions: 8 x 5.3 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (53 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #132,774 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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    #13 in  Books > History > Military > Canada
    #36 in  Books > History > Americas > Canada

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
AT THE CLIMAX OF THE 1947 FILM CLASSIC, MIRACLE ON 34TH STREET, THE hero-a young lawyer determined to prove that a man who claims to be Santa Claus should not be institutionalized as a lunatic-opens the argument that will win his case by reading aloud a long description of the reliability of the U.S. Post Office. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
one white male
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United States, New York, Supreme Court, South Boston, White House, San Francisco, President Carter, Lyndon Johnson, Los Angeles, South Vietnam, New Jersey, Bretton Woods, President Nixon, Soviet Union, Theodore Roosevelt, West Germany, Judge Garrity, Robert Kennedy, Duke Power, Jimmy Carter, President Ford, Richard Nixon, Social Security, Federal Reserve, House of Representatives
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How We Got Here: The 70's: The Decade That Brought You Modern Life--For Better or Worse
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53 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.7 out of 5 stars (53 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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53 of 54 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars This is essential reading! Brilliant!, January 22, 2000
By A Customer
David Frum's new book is a masterpiece of historical, social, and economic analysis. Frum persuasively makes the case that the 1970s were far more influential than the 1960s in terms of impact upon the future of America. Frum obviously evaluates the 1970s from a very conservative point of view, but he is a not a new-jerk conservative who automatically condemns everything about the 1970s and nostagically longs for the 1950s. Frum contends that the social conventions and mindsets which prevailed between 1920 and 1970 constituted a unique period in American history, existing due to the demands of the Great Depression, World War II, and the Cold War. Therefore, change was inevitable. Nevertheless, much of the change that occurred in the 1970s was undesirable because of its devestating impact on our culture. Frum accentuates the negative changes, but towards the end of the book he discusses the rays of hope that emerged at the end of a dark decade - deregulation, tax revolt, etc. Frum ranges across a remarkably diverse group of subjects from fashion to environmentalism to inflation in concise, definitive essays. Frum so frequently overwhelms the reader with his mastery of detail and narrative that editorial elaboration is not even necessary; he has already made his case. His prose sparkles and dazzles with the best style of any contemporary political writer. The book was a real page-turner; I could not put it down. I stayed up to 1 A.M. three nights in a row to finish it.
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35 of 36 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A brilliant and readable analysis, June 26, 2000
By A Customer

This is the book for anyone who's ever asked, sardonically or not, "How could the nation ever elect Ronald Reagan president?"

Today, many people, young and old, talk about the Reagan years like they some sort of political anomaly. David Frum's excellent deconstruction of the 1970s displaces that notion.

But it's not just about how the depressing 1970s gave way to the go-go 1980s. Frum draws a clear line from the intellectual seeds that were sown in the 1950s and 60s, seeds that didn't bear fruit until the 70s, to the issues that influence public discourse and behavior today.

The crux of Frum's analysis is that the seventies were a decade where America lost its faith in the concept of the "beneficent organization." This disillusionment crossed the political and social spectrum. The values of organizational hierarchy, centralized planning, self-sacrifice for a common goal, social conformity for the sake of community strength-values that sustained the nation through the Depression, World War II and the explosive American economic growth of the 1950s, ceased to have meaning amid the failures of Vietnam, the scandals of Watergate, decline of U.S. industry and the alarming simultaneous growth in inflation and unemployment.

The 1970s particularly marked the limits of the "New Deal" tradition of economic planning that by then was gospel for both Republicans and Democrats. The energy crisis laid bare the ineffectiveness, if not destructiveness, of Nixon's wage-price controls and by extension any other attempt for government to manage markets. Ongoing union corruption, plus the decline of heavy industry and the rise of service-oriented business, marginalized organized labor. Rather than achieve the goal of desegregation, social experimentation such as mandated busing only led to vast white flight and only increased racial separation and the discrepancy in quality of education.

In Frum's analysis, the 1970s marked a major upheaval in how we viewed the individual in relation to social structures-be it government, employers, religious institutions or family. It was, in truth, the "Me Decade." Diversity became more important than unity, personal fulfillment became more important than family responsibility, and desires were redefined as rights.

Although Frum writes from a conservative point of view, he does not view all the achievements of the 70s as bad. He clearly does not advocate going back to earlier times when racism was tolerated, industries from banking to trucking were heavily regulated and gold ownership was illegal. But he does believe that in many cases, a lot of good values, especially individual responsibility, the willingness to defer gratification and the belief in concepts higher than one's self, were discredited wholesale with bad ones.

All in all, the book makes for a very good history lesson. Young people especially may be surprised to learn that less than 30 years ago, mainstream Democrats still viewed the Wall Street investor as a foe of the average wage earner. And far from being embraced by the Conservative Right, American churches were drawing fire for their support of communist activism in Latin America and unilateral nuclear disarmament.

Frum does a wonderfully insightful job of showing the thinking, events and policies that brought these dramatic shifts about.

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21 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of the best books of the year, March 21, 2000
By A Customer
This refreshing new book is less a history of the 1970's than an exploration of some of the forces in American society that came to a head in that "slum of a decade," such as the widespread loss of respect for government, runaway inflation, the abandonment of the South Vietnamese, the cult of the self and the corresponding decline of family and community, and race- and gender-based politics. I think it would have been better to leave "the 70's" out of the book's title, but I recognize that almost any book that purports to be about the 1970's will catch the attention of those of us who came of age in that weird and wonderful era.

Frum is an excellent writer, and he provides clear and concise overviews of subjects as complex as the Bretton Woods monetary system, national mental-health policy, the economics of oil and the development of busing as a remedy for school segregation. He pays relatively little attention to popular culture, which is probably a good thing, because most of it was awful. For a fun, intelligent look at the popular culture of the decade, check out Edelstein and McDonugh's lavishly illustrated "The Seventies: From Hot Pants to Hot Tubs," which unfortunately is now hard to find.

A central question of "How We Got Here" is whether America's confidence in the 1950's, which completely fell apart in the 1970's, was an anomaly rather than the norm. A related question is whether the events of the 1970's represent America's return to its "normal" state -- contentious, disparate and often violent -- or the beginning of a steady national decline from which we will never fully recover. Frum seems to believe that midcentury stability was the product of, as he calls it, "special circumstances," and that we shouldn't be overly worried about our country's future. I agree with him, but it's also hard to ignore the evidence of national decline that he presents so compellingly in this book.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars One of my favorite history books
This is a popular history of the 1970s, with the thesis that the 1970s sociocultural changes are responsible for today's modern attitudes and social conditions. Read more
Published 7 months ago by J. Knape

1.0 out of 5 stars How We Got Here
Chuck it. I'm embarrassed to have been seen reading this drivel. I unwittingly fell for the title and was aghast when I realized what I purchased. Read more
Published 19 months ago by J. Lajon

2.0 out of 5 stars GAK!
This book is bad. There is no clearly defined thesis save for its title. The author used an abundance of statistics and poll data without regard for the context of the data nor... Read more
Published on December 19, 2006 by Whippis

3.0 out of 5 stars A fun read, but hardly objective
David Frum's book on the 1970s is a fast-paced, cleverly-written analysis of the very painful and tumultuous decade that he claims shaped today's America. Read more
Published on September 13, 2005 by H. F. Gibbard

4.0 out of 5 stars A Fresh Approach
So often history is written from either the humanistic or postmodern perspective that it is genuniely refreshing to read another take on a historical time period. Read more
Published on April 15, 2005 by T. Rosinbum

4.0 out of 5 stars Interesting slant on a maligned decade.
David Frum can write, and he takes a subject that usually gets superficial treatment, and comes up with some very good insights. Read more
Published on April 5, 2005 by Blue Eyes

2.0 out of 5 stars American Graffiti for Conservatives
Frum's work is not so much a chronicle of an era (for that see Bruce Schulman's The Seventies: The Great Shift in American Culture, Society and Politics) as it is a conservative... Read more
Published on January 8, 2005 by Si Sheppard

2.0 out of 5 stars Opinionated and Unsubstantial
Since the seventies are a decade of research importance to me, I was excited to stumble across Frum's book in a bibliography (only about 2 other histories of the decade-i.e. Read more
Published on October 8, 2004 by Clinton Hill Books

3.0 out of 5 stars OK, but never got through it
Based on the title, I was braced for a heavy-handed indictment of the 1970s. Instead, author Frum maintained a fairly non-judgmental, almost sociological tone to his writing... Read more
Published on July 9, 2004 by Jean E. Pouliot

5.0 out of 5 stars Too conservative; but also brilliant.
I hated the Seventies back in the Seventies. I was born in 1970, and I always felt there was something wrong with the deliberate sloppiness of dress, the ugly hairstyles, the... Read more
Published on March 14, 2004 by Timothy Doran

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