American Decades
The New Republic
Herbert Croly's Insurrections.
In 1909 a young intellectual, the son of two newspaper writers, published an influential political polemic titled The Promise of American Life. Herbert Croly argued that while the laissez-faire philosophy of keeping government out of the market-place held great appeal for a small-scale society, the advent of big business meant that a strong central government was needed to protect the weak. And to avoid being overtaken by special interests, government required strong leadership. Theodore Roosevelt became an early convert to Croly's "New Nationalism." Croly is also credited with inspiring Woodrow Wilson's "New Freedom." Though painfully shy, Croly, along with some like-minded colleagues, determined to start a magazine, a "journal of opinion" that would start "little insurrections" in the minds of its readers.
A Straight Fortune.
Willard and Dorothy Straight became Croly's...
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1910's Media
- Overview
-
Topics in the News
- The American Newspaper
- The Antiwar Press
- Censorship at the Front
- The Creel Committee
- The First American Tabloid
- The Hindenburg Confession
- The Most Hated Man in America
- The New Republic
- A New World of Books
- The Radio Music Box
- The "Smart Magazines"
- Stars and Stripes
- The Titanic and the Radio Act of 1912
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Awards
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Media, 1910–1919
