Historical Dictionary of the Kennedy-Johnson Era

Richard Dean Burns author Joseph M Siracusa author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Scarecrow Press

Published:19th Sep '07

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Historical Dictionary of the Kennedy-Johnson Era cover

In the history of the United States, few periods could more justly be regarded as the best and worst of times than the Kennedy-Johnson era. The arrival of John F. Kennedy in the White House in 1961 unleashed an unprecedented wave of hope and optimism in a large segment of the population; a wave that would come crashing down when he was assassinated only a few years later. His successor, Lyndon B. Johnson, enjoyed less popularity, but he was one of the most experienced and skilled presidents the country had ever seen, and he promised a Great Society to rival Kennedy's New Frontier. Both presidents were dogged by foreign policy disasters: Kennedy by the Bay of Pigs fiasco, although he came out ahead on the Cuban missile crisis, and Johnson from the backlash of the Vietnam War. The 1960s witnessed unprecedented progress toward racial and sexual equality, but it also played host to race and urban riots. And while impressive advances in the sciences and arts were fueling the American imagination, the counterculture rejected it all. The Historical Dictionary of the Kennedy-Johnson Era relates these events and provides extensive political, economic, and social background on this era through a detailed chronology, an introduction, appendixes, a bibliography, and several hundred cross-referenced dictionary entries on important persons, events, institutions, policies, and issues.

of interest to high school libraries. * American Reference Books Annual, March 2008 *

ISBN: 9780810858428

Dimensions: 225mm x 152mm x 34mm

Weight: 739g

432 pages