The 1950s chronicles a pivotal decade in U.S. history, when Americans radically
reshaped domestic social life and adapted to an international order governed by cold war
mentalities. As the country matured in the postwar period into its role as one of two superpowers in an ideologically polarized international order, Americans were challenged to adapt. While their tastes and attitudes evolved with the times, many Americans identified themselves more and more with traditional values, such as the importance of family and religion. The 1950s was a decade unlike any before.
This work offers a unique look at the transformation U.S. society underwent during the
1950s. As many places in the world struggled to rebound from the devastating effects of
World War II, Americans had to come to terms with the threat of immediate worldwide
apocalypse after the development of the H-bomb. At the same time, the civil rights
movement gained momentum; suburban living, television, and rock 'n' roll became
lifestyle choices; women joined the workforce in previously unheard of numbers; and baby
boomers began to exert their influence. The 1950s provides a glimpse at the forces that shaped life in the United
States during this fascinating decade, and it illustrates some of the ways in which
Americans handled the rapid transformations of politics, popular culture, economics, and
military strategy.
The chapters in this new volume in the Eyewitness History series
describe each year of the decade with a narrative account of the most significant social,
cultural, and political developments; a chronology of events; and eyewitness testimonies
drawn from newspapers, memoirs of private and public figures, literature, and other
sources.
Among those whose testimonies are presented are Ronald Reagan, Humphrey Bogart, Paul Robeson, Joseph McCarthy, Dean Acheson, Margaret Chase Smith, Katherine Anne Porter, Harry S. Truman, John Wayne, Reinhold Niebuhr, Adlai Stevenson, Rocky Marciano, Frank Lloyd Wright, and Nikita Khrushchev among many others.