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Home >  Books >  The Age of Reagan, 1964-1980
The Age of Reagan, 1964-1980
Print Mail
The Fall of the Old Liberal Order
By Steven F. Hayward
Posted: Saturday, September 1, 2001
The Age of Reagan
Dimensions: 9.18'' x 6.52''
848 pages
Crown Publishing Group
Publication Date: September 2001
Hardcover
ISBN: 0-7615-1337-X

The Age of Reagan brings to life the tumultuous decade and a half that preceded Ronald Reagan's ascent to the White House. Based on scores of interviews and years of research, Steven F. Hayward takes us on an engrossing journey through the most politically divisive years the United States has had to endure since the decade before the Civil War. Overseas, we were embroiled in a war we couldn't win; at home, our streets had become battlefields; and in Washington, the old liberal order was collapsing under the weight of failed policies. "It seemed that an era of American optimisim and progress had come to a close," Hayward writes. "The concatenation of Vietnam, Watergate, the recurrent energy crisis, the swooning economy, the increasingly disorderly world scene, and the failed presidencies associated with these events robbed Americans of their native optimism for the future."

Meanwhile, from out of the West rose a new conservative movement led by Ronald Reagan, a one-time Hollywood actor whose speech in 1964 in support of the doomed candidacy of Barry Goldwater not only electrified a national television audience but also created a political star who would change the course of history.

With meticulous detail, Hayward captures an America at war with itself--and an era whose reverberations we feel to this very day. He brings new insight into the profound failure of Lyndon Johnson's Great Society, the oddly liberal nature of Richard Nixon's administration, the significance of Reagan's years as California's governor and the sudden-death drama of his near defeat of Gerald Fold in the 1976 Republican primary, the listlessness of Jimmy Carter's leadership, and the political earthquake that was Reagan's victorious presidential campaign in 1980.

Provocative, authoritative, and majestic in scope, The Age of Reagan is an unforgettable account of the rebirth and triumph of the American spirit.

Steven F. Hayward is a senior fellow at the Pacific Research Institute for Public Policy in San Francisco and an adjunct fellow of the John Ashbrook Center at Ashland University in Ohio. The author of Churchill on Leadership, he writes frequently for National Review, Reason, and Policy Review, and his articles have appeared in the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Baltimore Sun, San Francisco Chronicle, Chicago Tribune, and dozens of other newspapers. Mr. Hayward, who holds a Ph.D. in American Studies from Claremont Graduate School, lives with his family in Rescue, California.



Table of Contents

Author's Note
Prologue: Theme of the Book

Part I: The Self-Destruction of Liberalism

  • Hinge: The Apogee of Liberalism in 1964
  • Wedge: Breaking Up the American Consensus
  • Razor: The Great Society and Its Discontents
  • Centrifuge: The Loss of Control
  • Anvil: 1968

Part II: The Failure of Richard Nixon

  • The Education of Richard Nixon
  • Exhaustion: The Shaping of the 1970s
  • Watergate and Its Aftermath

Part III: The Coming of Ronald Reagan

  • Detente and Its Discontents
  • The Dress Rehearsal: Reagan's Challenge
  • The Education of Jimmy Carter
  • Malaise
  • Nomination
  • Reagan's Moment

Related Links
Order from Barnes and Noble
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