American Contradiction with Pulitzer Prize-Winner Paul Starr

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Program Type:

Authors & Lectures

Age Group:

Adults
  • Registration is required for this event.
  • Registration will close on February 25, 2026 @ 7:00pm.

Program Description

Event Details

How did Americans come to elect Barack Obama, and then Donald Trump? Those choices capture, in a nutshell, what Paul Starr calls the American contradiction. The whole truth about America, Starr argues in this new history of the United States since the 1950s, has never been contained in one consistent set of values or interests. 

Our nation was born in the contradiction between freedom and slavery. Starr tells this history from the dual standpoints of the progressive movements that changed the American people and of the movements that emerged in response. Black Americans, he argues, served as a model minority, setting in motion America's twentieth-century revolutions in gender as well as race and rights. With industry's decline and the rise of economic inequality, millions of Americans have felt dispossessed and want the old America back. American Contradiction tells the story of how 1950s America became the almost unrecognizable America of the 2020s.

Paul Starr is professor of sociology and public affairs at Princeton University and founding coeditor of the American Prospect magazine. He received the Pulitzer Prize for Nonfiction and Bancroft Prize in American History for The Social Transformation of American Medicine. Over a half-century he has written essays and op‑eds for newspapers and magazines as well as books on America’s institutions, history, and politics.

                         

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