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Nicholas Lemann

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Nicholas Lemann



Average rating: 4.02 · 2,082 ratings · 264 reviews · 36 distinct works â€� Similar authors
The Promised Land: The Grea...

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Redemption: The Last Battle...

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The Big Test: The Secret Hi...

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American Democracy: 21 Hist...

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Higher Admissions: The Rise...

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The Photographs of Russell ...

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really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 8 ratings — published 2008 — 6 editions
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Out of the Forties

3.83 avg rating — 6 ratings — published 1983 — 5 editions
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The Fast Track: Texans and ...

it was amazing 5.00 avg rating — 4 ratings — published 1981 — 5 editions
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Quotes by Nicholas Lemann  (?)
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“The cotton gin made it possible to grow medium- and short-staple cotton commercially, which led to the spread of the cotton plantation from a small coastal area to most of the South. As cotton planting expanded, so did slavery, and slavery’s becoming the central institution of the Southern economy was the central precondition of the Civil War. What”
Nicholas Lemann, The Promised Land: The Great Black Migration and How It Changed America

“AMERICANS ARE imbued with the notion that social systems proceed from ideas, because that is what happened at the founding of our country. The relationship of society and ideas can work the other way around, though: people can create social systems first and then invent ideas that will fulfill their need to feel that the world as it exists makes sense.”
Nicholas Lemann, The Promised Land: The Great Black Migration and How It Changed America

“Among the leading intellectual proponents of Roosevelt’s form of liberalism were the three brilliant young founders of The New Republic, Herbert Croly, Walter Lippmann, and Walter Weyl—all slightly older friends of Adolf Berle’s. In 1909 Croly published a Progressive Era manifesto called The Promise of American Life. “The net result of the industrial expansion of the United States since the Civil War,â€� Croly wrote, “has been the establishment in the heart of the American economic and social system of certain glaring inequalities of condition and power â€� The rich men and big corporations have become too wealthy and powerful for their official standing in American life.â€� He asserted that the way to solve the problem was to reorient the country from the tradition of Thomas Jefferson (rural, decentralized) to the tradition of Alexander Hamilton (urban, financially adept). Weyl, in The New Democracy (1913), wrote that the country had been taken over by a “plutocracyâ€� that had rendered the traditional forms of American democracy impotent; government had to restore the balance and “enormously increase the extent of regulation.â€� To liberals of this kind, these were problems of nation-threatening severity, requiring radical modernization that would eliminate the trace elements of rural nineteenth-century America. Lippmann, in Drift and Mastery (1914), argued that William Jennings Bryan (“the true Don Quixote of our politicsâ€�) and his followers were fruitlessly at war with “the economic conditions which had upset the old life of the prairies, made new demands on democracy, introduced specialization and science, had destroyed village loyalties, frustrated private ambitions, and created the impersonal relationships of the modern world.â€� A larger, more powerful, more technical central government, staffed by a new class of trained experts, was the only plausible way to fight the dominance of big business. The leading Clash of the Titans liberals were from New York City, but even William Allen White, the celebrated (in part for being anti-Bryan) small-town Kansas editor who was a leading Progressive and one of their allies, wrote, in 1909, that “the day of the rule of the captain of industry is rapidly passing in America.â€� Now the country needed “captains of two opposing groups—capitalism and democracyâ€� to reset the”
Nicholas Lemann, Transaction Man: The Rise of the Deal and the Decline of the American Dream

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