ABSTRACT

This book is a comprehensive overview of the history of modern American thought and examines a wide range of modern thought and thinkers from 1860, when Charles Darwin’s Origin of Species was published in the United States, to the end of the twentieth century.

The focus of this volume is on the destabilizing effects of modern challenges to notions of fixed order and absolute truths, and the contradictory consequences for philosophical, political, social, and aesthetic thought. The intellectual response to the unprecedented changes of this era produced visions of both liberation from the hierarchies of the past and new forms of control and constraint. One of the central contradictions in modern thought was between biological and cultural ideas of social, psychological, and moral order. This is the first work to provide an interpretive vision of the entire period under consideration. Topics covered include evolutionary thought, philosophical Pragmatism, ideas of race and gender, pluralism and cultural relativism, Cold War Liberalism, science and religion, feminist thought, evolutionary psychology, and the late twentieth-century Culture Wars. Thinkers from William James and Charlotte Perkins Gilman through Judith Butler and Cornel West are analyzed as historical figures.

This volume is an ideal resource for a general audience as well as undergraduate and graduate students in the field of American intellectual history.

chapter 1|13 pages

Introduction

part One|83 pages

American Modernisms 1860–1919

chapter 1|17 pages

Darwinism and the Evolutionary Sensibility

chapter 2|14 pages

Pragmatism and Antifoundational Thought

chapter 4|16 pages

Progressivisms

chapter 5|18 pages

Rethinking Woman and Man

part II|97 pages

The Contradictions of the Democratic Imagination 1920–1962

chapter 7|16 pages

Science as Culture

The Moral Order of Modernity

chapter 9|17 pages

Pluralism and Cosmopolitanism

chapter 10|27 pages

Self and Social Order in the Cold War World

part III|85 pages

Rethinking Modernisms 1963–2000

chapter 11|20 pages

Cultural Revolutions and Ruptures

chapter 12|14 pages

The Social Construction of Everything

chapter 13|15 pages

The Return of Nature

chapter 14|17 pages

Gender and Sexuality

chapter 15|17 pages

Culture Wars