Conservatism Ascendant.
In the 1980s American culture was defined by a triumphant political and social conservatism. The election of Republican Ronald Reagan to the presidency in 1980 was the high-water mark of twentieth-century American conservatism, and his two terms as chief executive marked a true sea change in American life, a definitive redirection of political energy, purpose, and perspective. Reagan and his resurgent conservative ideology set forces in motion that some Americans cheered while many others looked on in astonishment. The conservative political agenda in the 1980s focused on undoing the liberal consensus that had prevailed since the 1930s and had reached its high point in President Lyndon B. Johnson's Great Society of the 1960s. Reagan and his supporters vowed to revoke the so-called welfare state and reduce the size of the federal government. "Government is not the answer to our problems," they declared;...
Source: American Decades: 1980-1989, ©1995 Gale Cengage. All Rights Reserved. Full copyright.
(The entire page is 1469 words.)
Want to read the whole thing?
Subscribe now to read the rest of this article. Plus, get access to:
- 30,000+ literature study guides
- Critical essays on more than 30,000 works of literature from Salem on Literature (exclusive to eNotes)
- An unparalleled literary criticism section. 40,000 full-length or excerpted essays.
- Content from leading academic publishers, all easily citable with our "Cite this page" button.
- 100% satisfaction guarantee READ MORE
