American History Too!

Pulling back the curtain on all the great debates and controversies of American History.

http://recordedhistory.net/american-history-too

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Episode 9 - McCarthy and the Second Red Scare


On episode nine of American

History Too! we turn our attention to a period in American history that has

become indelibly linked to one man: the Second Red Scare and Senator Joseph

McCarthy. But is McCarthy the be all and end all of anti-communism? What

influence did he really have?  And were

there other figures in the United States who played more prominent and

important roles in creating what the historian David Caute called ‘the great

fear’?  Is ‘Hooverism’ – or even ‘Nixonism’

– a better name to understand this period?

We take you through a tour of the interesting, and often distasteful,

figures that the Second Red Scare brought to prominence.  We also discuss the parallel rise of the  so-called ‘Lavender Scare’ which saw gay

Americans targeted – on some occasions more aggressively – than suspected

communists. 

Stay tuned until the very end when you’ll be treated to a

Cold War “anthem” from Carson Robison!

We will back in two weeks to discuss Lyndon Johnson and the

Great Society.

Cheers,

Mark and Malcolm

Reading

-         

Richard Hofstadter, The Paranoid Style in American Politics (first published 1964)

-         

Kyle A. Cuordileone, ‘"Politics in an Age

of Anxiety": Cold War Political Culture and the Crisis in American

Masculinity, 1949-1960,’ Journal of American History, 87:2 (Sep., 2000),

515-545

-         

Jennifer Delton, “Rethinking Post-World War II

Anticommunism,” The Journal of the Historical Society (March, 2010),

1-41

-         

David K. Johnson, The Lavender Scare: The

Cold War Persecution of Gays and Lesbians in the Federal Government (Chicago,

IL: University of Chicago Press, 2004)-

-         

Kathryn Olmsted, Real Enemies: Conspiracy

Theories and American Democracy, World War 1 to 9/11 (Oxford: Oxford

University Press, 2009)

-         

Nelson W. Polsby, “Towards an Explanation of

McCarthyism,” Political Studies 8 (1960), 250-271-

-         

Ellen Schrecker, “McCarthyism: Political

Repression and the Fear of Communism,” Social Research 71.

(2004),1041-1086.

-         

Gregg Marshall, Tricky Dick and the Pink

Lady: Richard Nixon vs. Helen Gahagan Douglas--Sexual Politics and the Red

Scare, 1950 (New York: Random House, 1998) Chp.1 - http://www.nytimes.com/books/first/m/mitchell-tricky.html

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 February 14, 2015  37m