Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 200
Trim: 6¼ x 9⅜
978-1-5381-1579-4 • Hardback • November 2018 • $40.00 • (£30.00)
978-1-5381-1577-0 • eBook • November 2018 • $38.00 • (£30.00)
Lawrence R. Samuel is the founder of AmeriCulture, a Miami- and New York City-based consultancy dedicated to translating the emerging cultural landscape into business opportunities. He is a blogger for Psychology Today, where he has received hundreds of thousands of hits, and is often quoted in national and international media. Larry is the author of many books, including Sexidemic: A Cultural History of Sex in America (Rowman, 2013), Death, American Style: A Cultural History of Dying in America (Rowman, 2013), American Fatherhood: A Cultural History (Rowman, 2016), and Future Trends: A Guide to Decision Making and Leadership in Business (Rowman, 2018).
Chapter 1
| New Roads to Happiness,1920-1939
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Chapter 2
| The Paradox of Happiness, 1940-1959
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Chapter 3
| What Makes You Happy?, 1960-1979
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Chapter 4
| Don’t Worry, Be Happy, 1980-1999
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Chapter 5
| Are You Happy Yet?, 2000-2009
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Chapter 6
| Happily Ever After, 2010-
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"In addition to chronicling the self-help genre, Samuel summarizes psychology and sociology insights for a lay audience . . . . This study will interest readers interested in American culture, and Americans both enamored and skeptical of self-help.— Publishers Weekly
Recommended: Jefferson’s reference to the pursuit of happiness as an endowed right reflected a common concern of his time; during the intervening years, Americans both individually and collectively came to focus on happiness as a life goal. This survey of happiness from 1920 to the present concludes that despite this country's increasing affluence, Americans’ focus on materialistic gain did not lead to more happiness; by 2018, the US had slipped to 18th place in world happiness surveys. Studies have found that helping others is a more effective means of achieving happiness. Chronologically organized, the volume discusses developments in popular culture, academia, and physical and social sciences as well as critics of happiness studies. The field remains ill-defined and methodologically sloppy even as it has grown into highly profitable enterprises of self-help books, pharmaceuticals, and therapies. From 2000 onward, academic study became institutionalized with happiness journals, college courses, institutes, and departments. Scholars urged government responsibility for citizen happiness and stressed the importance of measuring well-being over economic growth. Effectively written, the book is a general survey, not an in-depth analysis; typical sources are the New York Times rather than the studies discussed.— Choice Reviews
This is an impressively documented account of a national obsession with happiness over the past century, right through the current surge of positive psychology. The many people who tried to tell Americans how to be happy, or why they were failing, sustain the narrative, along with a sympathetic assessment of why the goal seems so elusive. The reader emerges wiser, if not happier.
— Peter N. Stearns
https://www.publishersweekly.com/9781538115794Happiness in America: A Cultural HistoryLawrence R. Samuel. Rowman & Littlefield, $32 (190p) ISBN 978-1-5381-1579-4Samuel (The American Way of Life) examines nearly a century of study on the unique American conception of happiness in this meditative history. Pointing out that happiness was deemed so significant that it was codified into the Declaration of Independence, Samuel takes capitalism, fluctuations in the American economy, and individualism vs. a communal spirit as fundamental reference points. In the post-WWII era, he recounts, Americans learned that materialism was not conducive to happiness and “it could not be acquired on a lay-away plan like a new Frigidaire or Studebaker.” The 1980s–90s saw a rampant increase in the use of antidepressants; more recent developments include apps and social media campaigns designed to spark joy. He also notes gendered happiness considerations; contemporary concerns about “having it all” date back to the 1950s, when women started entering the workforce in large numbers. In addition to chronicling the self-help genre, Samuel summarizes psychology and sociology insights for a lay audience. Samuel does not exactly land on a prescription for happiness, but instructive commonalities and patterns emerge. This study will interest readers interested in American culture, and Americans both enamored and skeptical of self-help. (Nov.)— Publishers Weekly