Clark | The Making of the American Creative Class | Buch | 978-0-19-973162-6 | sack.de

Buch, Englisch, 608 Seiten, Format (B × H): 163 mm x 240 mm, Gewicht: 944 g

Clark

The Making of the American Creative Class

New York's Culture Workers and Twentieth-Century Consumer Capitalism

Buch, Englisch, 608 Seiten, Format (B × H): 163 mm x 240 mm, Gewicht: 944 g

ISBN: 978-0-19-973162-6
Verlag: OXFORD UNIV PR


During the middle decades of the twentieth century, the production of America's consumer culture was centralized in midtown Manhattan to an extent unparalleled in the history of the modern United States. Within a few square miles of skyscrapers were the headquarters of networks like NBC and CBS, the editorial offices of book publishers and mass circulation magazines such as Time and Life, numerous influential newspapers, and major advertising
agencies on Madison Avenue. Every day tens of thousands of writers, editors, artists, performers, technicians, secretaries, and other white-collar workers made advertisements, produced media content, and enhanced the appearance of goods in order to boost sales. While this center of creativity has often been portrayed as a
smoothly running machine, within these offices many white-collar workers challenged the managers and executives who directed their labors.

In this definitive history, The Making of the American Creative Class examines these workers and their industries throughout the twentieth century. As manufacturers and retailers competed to attract consumers' attention, their advertising expenditures financed the growth of enterprises engaged in the production of culture, which in turn provided employment for an increasing number of clerical, technical, professional, and creative workers. The book explores employees' efforts to
improve their working conditions by forming unions, experimenting with alternative media and cultural endeavors supported by public, labor, or cooperative patronage, and expanding their opportunities for creative autonomy. As blacklisting and attacks on militant unions left them destroyed or weakened, workers in
advertising, design, publishing, and broadcasting in the late twentieth century were constrained in their ability to respond to economic dislocations and to combat discrimination in the culture industries.

At once a portrait of a city and the national culture of consumer capitalism it has produced, The Making of the American Creative Class is an innovative narrative of modern American history that addresses issues of earnings and status still experienced by today's culture workers.
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Shannan Clark teaches history at Montclair State University. He lives in Brooklyn, New York.


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