Populism. The word is used a lot today by political journalists in reference to both President Trump supporters and the Brexit movement. And, historically speaking, it is generally used inaccurately, a fact that I, too, was unaware of until I read another reader’s review of a separate title. That reviewer recommended this book, written by Duke professor of history, Lawrence Goodwyn, and published in 1979.
While the title refers to the book as ‘short’, it is a very thorough review of the populist political movement that rose out of the National Farmers Alliance, which went under a series of different names and platforms that ultimately had everything to do with the coinage of silver and relatively little to do with the original populist reforms.
What is most fascinating to me is not the acquisition of historical accuracy regarding the populist label as it is the revelation of the degree to which the 1896 presidential election, between Republican William McKinley and Democrat (and presumed populist) William Jennings Bryant, ultimately cast the shape of American economics and politics that survives yet today. While that election appeared to turn on gold (McKinley) versus silver (Bryant), the outcome would ultimately define no less than what it means to be an American in the 21st Century.
It all began with the American Civil War, not surprisingly. And, more specifically, who was going to pay the enormous debt incurred to fight it. And that, ultimately, came down to the question of currency. The creation of a hard currency, which is ultimately the position that won out, protected the bankers and other owners of corporate capital, but at the expense of laborers and farmers.
The hard currency ultimately exaggerated the worst abuses of the crop lien system then prevalent in the South, forcing farmers (land-owners and tenants alike) into a cycle of increasing debt and falling commodity prices that they could not escape. It is, in many ways, the same inescapable cycle that entraps the urban and rural poor today.
But that’s where the populist analogy ends, as the populist agrarian movement pursued a political agenda that would be the antithesis of Trump’s MAGA agenda of today. It was, in fact, the antitheses of both the modern conservative and progressive agendas, both of which only appear to offer a real distinction and choice.
Both agendas presume the economic supremacy of capital and the political supremacy of the corporate and banking classes that control it. Among other things, it is the supremacy of capital that has fueled the rapid and unbridled consolidation of both industry and agriculture in the US, permanently planting the corporation at the top of the political food chain. (In 1870, the average US factory had only 8 workers.)
Before the Civil War, about 80% of all free white men owned property. By 1890, however, the richest 9% of all Americans (still white men) owned three-fourths of all wealth and within a decade one in eight Americans were living in abject poverty. With the exception of a historically brief period following World War II, in which unions managed to give laborers a political voice, now lost, it is a trend that continues to this day.
What was most amazing to me, in reading this book, was how little things have really changed. Our political parties are built on regional alliances far more than differences of ideological substance. Both accept the supremacy of corporate consolidation and the benefit of economies of scale, even though there is little actual evidence to support the premise. Consolidation has done nothing quite so effectively as it has promoted political, social, and financial inequality. (Republicans and Democrats both blamed the farmers themselves for their economic plight in the 1890s, much as politicians frequently blame the poor themselves for their plight today.)
The solutions proposed by the populists of the National Agrarian Federation were decidedly collective in nature and built from the success of the cooperative movement that had provided some relief from corporate anarchy. It called for the abolition of private banks, a new dynamic currency, the nationalization of the railroads, and the formation of government cooperatives to handle crop financing, insurance, and post-harvest handling and storage. It was, in other words, quite the ideological opposite of Trump’s anti-immigrant, anti-regulatory, pro-corporate agenda.
The author makes two other important contributions to the current political dialogue. The first is to refute the illusion promoted by both political parties that American history is a timeline of uninterrupted progress and advancement. It is, more than we care to admit, a history of exploitation and the dominance of minority interests under the guise of personal and economic freedom that, for most, does not exist.
And because it is a myth that is almost universally accepted, the author notes, real political reform in the US is virtually impossible to achieve, in short because we refuse to see the world the way it really is. We have, as a result, neither the confidence nor the persistence to force the owners of capital, which control the political agenda, to give up the advantages they have enshrined into American politics and business.
In short, this is a fascinating book that everyone should have the courage to read. You may not agree with the author’s conclusions, and there will surely be other historians who will take exception with his interpretation. Each of us, however, should have a commitment to defend that which we believe in the face of inconvenient facts, including those presented in this book.
The Populist Moment: A Short History of the Agrarian Revolt in America (Galaxy Books) Abridged Edition, Kindle Edition
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Lawrence Goodwyn
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ISBN-13: 978-0195024173
ISBN-10: 0195024176
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This condensed version of Lawrence Goodwyn's Democratic Promise, the highly-acclaimed study on American Populism which the Civil Liberties Review called "a brilliant, comprehensive study," offers new political language designed to provide a fresh means of assessing both democracy and authoritarianism today.
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Editorial Reviews
Review
"A history of Populism that will be the new standard against which all future efforts must be measured."--The Progressive
--This text refers to an alternate kindle_edition edition.
About the Author
Lawrence Goodwyn is Professor of History at Duke University.
--This text refers to an alternate kindle_edition edition.
Product details
- ASIN : B006TCBJXA
- Publisher : Oxford University Press; Abridged edition (November 30, 1978)
- Publication date : November 30, 1978
- Language : English
- File size : 1121 KB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 384 pages
- Lending : Enabled
- Best Sellers Rank: #290,448 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #117 in Reconstruction History of the U.S.
- #775 in Political Science (Kindle Store)
- #1,975 in Christian Theology (Kindle Store)
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Reviewed in the United States on March 13, 2018
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Reviewed in the United States on July 8, 2020
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I'm so glad a condensed version of the original 3-volume work was made available. Reading this was very challenging for me, but I suspect my aging brain is as responsible for that as anything I can attribute to the author. But the subject of the book is a very important one, and the conclusion of the author -- that such a movement was bound to be frustrated and ultimately unsuccessful -- bears out its importance. Perhaps, one day ...
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Reviewed in the United States on April 4, 2014
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I bought this book after seeing Lawrence Goodwyn's name in the NY Times obituaries. I have long been fascinated by the eras in US history where the people rise up to claim their rights. I wanted to see Goodwyn's take on the story of the Populist movement of the late 19th century.
Goodwyn's portrayal of the agrarian cooperative movement is masterful. I kept highlighting major points in my Kindle -- especially about how the educational aspect of the cooperative movement was what gave it the most strength. Once the people's understanding of the financial issues increased, their confidence was built, resulting in a rising tide of democratic sentiment that challenged the status quo.
Goodwyn's analysis of how the movement failed was also instructive. And the highlight was when Goodwyn tied the story of Populism's defeat to the shape that political dialogue has taken in the 21st century -- especially as it relates to the capitalism vs. communism dichotomy.
I highly recommend this book to people who, like me, are not academics, but appreciate a well-written historical account that provides insight into current affairs.
Goodwyn's portrayal of the agrarian cooperative movement is masterful. I kept highlighting major points in my Kindle -- especially about how the educational aspect of the cooperative movement was what gave it the most strength. Once the people's understanding of the financial issues increased, their confidence was built, resulting in a rising tide of democratic sentiment that challenged the status quo.
Goodwyn's analysis of how the movement failed was also instructive. And the highlight was when Goodwyn tied the story of Populism's defeat to the shape that political dialogue has taken in the 21st century -- especially as it relates to the capitalism vs. communism dichotomy.
I highly recommend this book to people who, like me, are not academics, but appreciate a well-written historical account that provides insight into current affairs.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 28, 2012
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Usually histories of economics put me to sleep. But Lawrence Goodwyn's "The Populist Movement" is an enthralling gem that will give you numerous "Aha!" moments as it shows how and why populist movements, particularly that of the post-Civil War era (with its inception in Texas), began, grew, and failed in competing with big banks and business. There are many surprises to someone like me, who is not an economist but has been led (or pushed) to care about it from what has happened in and to America these past 30 years. Goodwyn shows clearly why the small farmers of southern and Plains America were driven to do something about the crushing control of big banks, growing commercial interests, and Wall Street. Ultimately, they failed because all power and control was in the hands of men like Gould and Morgan and the other Robber Barons. There is, however, a lesson to be taken from "The Populist Movement," that knowing and anticipating what massive blockages stand in the way of economic and political change can help people work around them. No one who reads Goodwyn's book can claim, "Well, I just didn't know."
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Reviewed in the United States on June 25, 2012Verified Purchase
This is a great book. This read is as titled: The Populist Movement circa the 1900s. Anyone wishing to experience the beginnings of the cooperative movement in America and to understand the communal concepts in American history might enjoy this work. This work is about the American farmer in their historical attempt to organize with the American labor class and do: political, social, economic and philosophical valued battle against the Capitalist class values. Do not miss read this description. This is an American text written for Americans and very informative. The financial-political machine of McKinley crushes millions of hopeful labor party or populist party honest citizenry to uphold the capitalist system leadership, with capital manipulation. I will keep this text forever.
ChangeItOrDrownIt
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ChangeItOrDrownIt
B 36 Ears
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