Channeling the past : politicizing history in postwar America

Author(s)

    • Christiansen, Erik

Bibliographic Information

Channeling the past : politicizing history in postwar America

Erik Christiansen

(Studies in American thought and culture / series editor, Paul S. Boyer)

University of Wisconsin Press, c2013

  • : pbk

Available at  / 4 libraries

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Note

Bibliography: p. 283-295

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

After the turmoil of the Great Depression and World War II, Americans looked to the nation's more distant past for lessons to inform its uncertain future. By applying recent and emerging techniques in mass communication-including radio and television programs and commercial book clubs-American elites working in media, commerce, and government used history to confer authority on their respective messages. With insight and wit, Erik Christiansen uncovers in Channeling the Past the ways that powerful corporations rewrote history to strengthen the postwar corporate state, while progressives, communists, and other leftists vied to make their own versions of the past more popular. Christiansen looks closely at several notable initiatives-CBS's flashback You Are There program; the Smithsonian Museum of American History, constructed in the late 1950s; the Cavalcade of America program sponsored by the Du Pont Company; the History Book Club; and the Freedom Train, a museum on rails that travelled the country from 1947 to 1949 exhibiting historic documents and flags, including original copies of the U.S. Constitution and the Magna Carta. It is often said that history is written by the victors, but Christiansen offers a more nuanced perspective: history is constantly remade to suit the objectives of those with the resources to do it. He offers dramatic evidence of sophisticated calculations that influenced both public opinion and historical memory, and shows that Americans' relationships with the past changed as a result.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations Preface Introduction: History's Past Presence 1 The History Book Club Offers the Past as an \u0022Image of Ourselves\u0022 2 Mythologizing History on Du Pont's Cavalcade of America 3 History, News, and You Are There 4 The Freedom Train's Narrow Gauge Iconography 5 Building a \u0022National Shrine\u0022 at the National Museum of American History Conclusion: Once and Future Truths Notes Bibliography Index

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