About AEI My AEI Support AEI Contact AEI
Home Events Books Short Publications Research Areas Scholars & Fellows


Search


FindAdvanced Search

Browse all books by:
- Date
- Subject
- Author
- Title


Home
About
Events
Books
Short Publications
Public Opinion Studies
Scholars
Other Links

Home >  Research Areas >  AEI's Political Corner >  Books >  The First Measured Century
The First Measured Century
Print Mail
An Illustrated Guide to Trends in America, 1900-2000
By Ben J. Wattenberg, Theodore Caplow, Louis Hicks
Posted: Monday, January 1, 2001
Political Corner Logo
Dimensions: 6'' x 9''
300 pages
AEI Press  (Washington)
Publication Date: January 2001
Paperback
ISBN: 0844741388
Price: $ 20
Add to Cart  
Examination Copies

Most history tells the story of the past through anecdotes, but anecdotes do not always present an accurate or complete picture. There is another way to look at history. The rise of widespread, systematic data collection in the twentieth century--the first measured century--allows us to examine the past 100 years with unprecedented clarity.

Now, The First Measured Century uses social data to tell us what happened to everyday Americans in the twentieth century. Whether the topic is politics, sexual behavior, economics, immigration, living arrangements, religion, longevity, or public opinion, this myth-busting popular reference work shows that the facts often turn out to be more interesting than the fiction.

A special feature of The First Measured Century is original 1999 research that builds on the landmark sociological study of the 1920s, "Middletown." With survey results that span more than seven decades, The First Measured Century offers the longest timeline of consistent attitudinal data anywhere.

This panorama of the American twentieth century unfolds in a series of key trends, each explained in a one-page essay written for the general reader and illustrated by one or more vibrantly colored charts on the facing page. The First Measured Century is an essential tool for anyone interested in journalism, economics, history, political science, sociology, demography, public relations, business, the arts, or public policy.

Theodore Caplow is the Commonwealth Professor of Sociology at the University of Virginia and the author of many books, inclduing American Social Trends (Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1991). Louis Hicks is an associate professor of sociology at St. Mary's College of Maryland and co-author of Systems of War and Peace (University Press of America, 1995). Ben J. Wattenberg is a senior fellow at AEI, a syndicated solumnist, moderator of the PBS series "Think Tank," and author of many books, including Values Matter most (Free Press, 1995).



View Book Summary
Related Links
Review in Commentary
Press Release about the Book
Review in the Los Angeles Times
Coverage in the AEI Newsletter
Review in the Orlando-Sentinel
Related article by Ben J. Wattenberg
Book Forum
AEI's Political Corner
Review in the Futurist


Also by Ben J. Wattenberg
Recent Articles
Rise and Fall of Nations
Looking to Lieberman
Avoid the Trap of Self-Condemnation
Latest Book
Fighting Words
A Tale of How Liberals Created Neo-Conservatism
Subscribe to Our E-mail List

Send us an e-mail here.


Election Watch 2008
AEI's Election Watch series returns in December 2007 for its fourteenth season, bringing
together AEI's nationally renowned team of political analysts and other commentators. These sessions are essential for anyone who wants to understand the elections.

Public Opinion Snapshot - Who Will Win?

Regardless of who you support, and trying to be as objective as possible, who do you think will win the election in November . . . ? (October)

   Obama        McCain 

 60                38

CNN/Opinion Research Corp.


The Future of Red, Blue, and Purple America
The Future of Red, Blue, and Purple America is a joint project of the American Enterprise Institute and Brookings Institution that focuses on the impact of demographic and geographic change on the 2008 elections and beyond. Selected papers from the upcoming Brookings Institution Press book and presentations as well as audio, video, and summary files from the conference held at AEI on February 28 are available here.

AEI and Brookings have launched the Election Reform Project. The program is a joint effort to monitor the implementation of the Help America Vote Act and to develop a bipartisan policy agenda for further improvements in the administration of elections.