Winning While Losing: Civil Rights, The Conservative Movement and the Presidency from Nixon to Obama - Paperback

Winning While Losing: Civil Rights, The Conservative Movement and the Presidency from Nixon to Obama - Paperback

$40.43


by Kenneth Osgood (Editor), Derrick E. White (Editor)

During the four decades separating the death of Martin Luther King and the election of Barack Obama, the meaning of civil rights became increasingly complex. Civil rights leaders made great strides in breaking down once-impermeable racial barriers, but they also suffered many political setbacks in their attempts to remedy centuries of discrimination. Complicating matters, the conservative turn in American political life transformed the national conversation about race and civil rights in surprising ways.

This pioneering collection of essays explores the paradoxical nature of civil rights politics in the years following the 1960s civil rights movement by chronicling the ways in which presidential politics both advanced and constrained the quest for racial equality in the United States.

Author Biography

Kenneth Osgood, director of the McBride Honors Program in Public Affairs at the Colorado School of Mines, is coauthor of Selling War in a Media Age: The Presidency and Public Opinion in the American Century. Derrick E. White, visiting associate professor of history at Dartmouth College, is the author of The Challenge of Blackness: The Institute of the Black World and Political Activism in the 1970s.

Number of Pages: 298
Dimensions: 0.67 x 9 x 6 IN
Publication Date: January 08, 2018
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Estimated delivery: June 12 - June 15, 2026

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