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Suburban Warriors
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Table of Contents

List of Illustrations ix Acknowledgments xi INTRODUCTION 3 CHAPTER 1 The Setting 20 CHAPTER 2 "A Sleeping Giant Is Awakening": Right-Wing Mobilizatio, 1960-1963 54 CHAPTER 3 The Grassroots Goldwater Campaign 111 CHAPTER 4 The Conservative Worldview at the Grass Roots 147 CHAPTER 5 The Birth of Populist Conservatism 187 CHAPTER 6 New Social Issues and Resurgent Evangelicalism 217 EPILOGUE 262 Notes 275 Bibliography 351 Index 379

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A landmark study that will enlighten anyone who cares about the evolution of American politics since World War II. With Lisa McGirr's thorough, sophisticated, smoothly crafted exploration of Orange County conservatism, the history of the modern Right has finally come of age. -- Michael Kazin, Georgetown University, coauthor of "America Divided" and "The Populist Persuasion" In her impressively researched, gracefully written book, Lisa McGirr convincingly demonstrates that historians, who have been preoccupied with the Left in the 1960s, need to develop a deeper comprehension of how conservatives in places such as Orange County reconfigured American political culture. Readers will find her attempt to understand them, rather than dismiss or condemn them, both rewarding and challenging. -- William E. Leuchtenburg, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Something happened to the Republican Party in the 1960s, changing it forever. How did a crypto-liberal, Northeast-dominated, establishment-oriented party become a populist, counter-liberal crusade? Here's the story: exhaustively researched and presented with telling analysis and narrative verve. -- Kevin Starr, State Librarian of California

About the Author

Lisa McGirr is Assistant Professor of History at Harvard University

Reviews

Suburban Warriors affords a rare picture of the grass-roots process actually working at a specific site... McGirr's setting is California's Orange County, which became America's most celebrated conservative stronghold in the 1960s. McGirr's book provides a valuable scholarly analysis of the demographics, culture, and history that made the county distinctively conservative. -- Russell Baker New York Review of Books A fascinating tale ... Suburban Warriors goes a long way to explaining the origins of a movement whose influence remains formidable to this day. -- Stephen Dale Washington Post Book World Well written and authoritative, enriched by the voices of the Orange County conservatives [McGirr] interviewed and by deep archival research. -- Mark Schmitt American Prospect Orange County's success as a crucible for conservatism, McGirr skillfully argues, was rooted in the fact that it took tried and true American values of individualism and community, boldly exaggerated them and then recombined them in ways that accentuated their messy contradictions... McGirr blends political and social history and goes where few analysts before: to the kitchen tables as well as the meeting halls of the early right-wing movement. This is the book's great contribution. -- Arlene Stein The Nation The best book yet written about the local insurgencies that dumped liberal Republicanism into the dustbin of history and made the GOP party of Ronald Reagan and Newt Gingrich. -- Michael Kazin Lingua Franca McGirr paints a complex picture ... Incisive, yet fair, this represents an important standing of how antimodernist ideologies continue to thrive. Publishers Weekly The strength of her book is her explanation of the growth of the conservative movement through the stories of women and men who moved to the Orange County suburbs ... Remember welfare? Whatever happened to it? Where did affirmative action go? [McGirr explains] their demise and that of many other ideas that seemed so permanent, so much a part of a national consensus, in 1964. -- Bill Boyarski Los Angeles Times This work captures the politically charged yet modest middle-class culture that gave life to the conservative movement... McGirr has provided an elegantly written analysis of the Right which will reshape historical understandings of the conservative movement for some time to come. -- Gregory L. Schneider Weekly Standard A focused, stimulating account that demonstrates that many of the best contemporary works of the Sixties are about the rise of the Right. Library Journal McGirr is enlightening, offering much solid research on the devoted beserkers who seized the Republican Party in 1964 to foist Goldwater on an unwelcoming nation... McGirr has uncovered something important about the activists of the right. -- Todd Gitlin Boston Review [McGirr] treats her subject with commendable fairness ... deeply informed with dozens of interviews and serious archival work... Suburban Warriors is a welcome addition to contemporary American history. It is the first long look at activists who have been woefully understudied given their influence on the course of recent politics. -- Brian Doherty Reason A groundbreaking work of scholarship... -- John J. Miller National Review Should be read by anyone interested in American political developments of the last four decades... This is a fair-minded book from which both the Right and its opponents could learn a great deal. -- Duane Oldfield Journal of Church and State Suburban Warriors is an excellent example of the value of combining political with community history. -- Mary C. Brennan The Journal of American History

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