Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 358
Trim: 6⅜ x 9
978-1-4422-2675-3 • Hardback • December 2019 • $129.00 • (£99.00)
978-1-5381-5843-2 • Paperback • May 2021 • $49.00 • (£38.00)
978-1-4422-2676-0 • eBook • December 2019 • $40.50 • (£30.00)
Casey Nelson Blake is Mendelson Family Professor of American Studies at Columbia University. Daniel H. Borus is Professor of History Emeritus at the University of Rochester. Howard Brick is Louis Evans Professor of History at the University of Michigan.
A strikingly original and nuanced account of Americans’ responses to the traumatic events of midcentury and to the country’s new place in the world.— Dorothy Ross, from the foreword
At the Center is an impressive synthesis of American Thought and Culture for a critical period. The range and depth of knowledge makes this book indispensable for scholars and students. Familiar figures receive their due along with others less well known but deserving. The book is at once authoritative and accessible.— George Cotkin, author of Existential America and Feast of Excess
This revisionist account of the long 1950s in American intellectual life is both exciting and timely. Showing how across different domains artists and thinkers sought coherence after depression and war without renouncing their insights into flux and historicity, Borus, Blake and Brick make clear that the boundary to the experimentation and upheaval of the 1960s was much more porous than usually thought. Without apologizing for its limitations, they have saved a pregnant era from the condescension of posterity.— Samuel Moyn, Yale University
While surveying and acutely commenting on an impressive range of thinkers and ideas, this book makes itself indispensable when it pauses to pay intricately nuanced attention to innovative works of music, painting, sculpture, literature, and architecture. At the Center is a fresh, absorbing, and compelling look at U.S. culture from 1948 to 1963.— Ross Posnock, Columbia University
Surveying the American landscape from the aftermath of World War II through the sharpening conflicts of the early 1960s, At the Center weaves together diverse strands of midcentury thought in revelatory fashion. It finds neither conformity nor complacency nor consensus but instead a profound concern for the stable center of things—a concern that would infuse debates over everything from the individual self to the global order, ultimately shaping ideas about hegemony, history, and humanity itself. Alert to currents and cross-currents, prominent figures and lesser known ones, scientific as well as popular culture, this is an impressive achievement: the most precise and persuasive account yet of the distinctive moods of U.S. cultural, political, and intellectual life at midcentury. — Sarah Igo, author of The Averaged American: Surveys, Citizens and the Making of a Mass Public and The Known Citizen: A History of Privacy in Modern America
A mountain of scholarship on mid-twentieth-century American culture has accumulated in recent decades, leaving nonspecialists and students to wonder how they can ever ascend its steep, rocky slopes. Synthetic overviews, offering more detailed and sophisticated analysis than surveys and a wider view than monographs, are indispensable resources. The publication of At the Center, an especially fine example of this underappreciated genre, is reason to celebrate.
Discerning analyses range from icons of popular culture to pioneers in literary and artistic expression, from the work of scholarly communities to the efforts of fledgling bands of activists that later mushroomed into major social movements....At the Center rewards readers with a kaleidoscopic vision of a vibrant era too often seen simply as an interregnum.
— James T. Kloppenberg, Harvard University