Freedom From Fear: The American People in Depression and War, 1929-1945, by David M. Kennedy (Oxford University Press) - The Pulitzer Prizes
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For a distinguished book of the year upon the history of the United States, Five thousand dollars ($5,000).

Freedom From Fear: The American People in Depression and War, 1929-1945, by David M. Kennedy (Oxford University Press)

Columbia University President George Rupp (right) presents David M. Kennedy with The 2000 Pulitzer Prize in History.

Winning Work

Freedom From Fear: The American People in Depression and War, 1929-1945

By David M. Kennedy

Between 1929 and 1945, two great travails were visited upon the American people: the Great Depression and World War II.Freedom from Fear tells the story of how Americans endured, and eventually prevailed, in the face of those unprecedented calamities.

The Depression was both a disaster and an opportunity. As David Kennedy vividly demonstrates, the economic crisis of the 1930s was far more than a simple reaction to the alleged excesses of the 1920s. For nearly a century before 1929, America's unbridled industrial revolution had gyrated through repeated boom and bust cycles, wastefully consuming capital and inflicting untold misery on city and countryside alike. Nor was the fabled prosperity of the 1920s as uniformly shared as legend portrays. Countless Americans, especially if they were farmers, African Americans, or recent immigrants, eked out threadbare lives on the margins of national life. For them, the Depression was but another of the ordeals of fear and insecurity with which they were sadly familiar.

Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal wrung from the trauma of the 1930s a lasting legacy of economic and social reform, including the Social Security Act, new banking and financial laws, regulatory legislation, and new opportunities for organized labor. Taken together, those reforms gave a measure of security to millions of Americans who had never had much of it, and with it a fresh sense of having a stake in their country.

Freedom from Fear tells the story of the New Deal's achievements, without slighting its shortcomings, contradictions, and failures. It is a story rich in drama and peopled with unforgettable personalities, including the incandescent but enigmatic figure of Roosevelt himself.

Even as the New Deal was coping with the Depression, a still more fearsome menace was developing abroad--Hitler's thirst for war in Europe, coupled with the imperial ambitions of Japan in Asia. The same generation of Americans who battled the Depression eventually had to shoulder arms in another conflict that wreaked worldwide destruction, ushered in the nuclear age, and forever changed their own way of life and their country's relationship to the rest of the world. Freedom from Fear explains how the nation agonized over its role in World War II, how it fought the war, why the United States won, and why the consequences of victory were sometimes sweet, sometimes ironic. In a compelling narrative, Kennedy analyzes the determinants of American strategy, the painful choices faced by commanders and statesmen, and the agonies inflicted on the millions of ordinary Americans who were compelled to swallow their fears and face battle as best they could.

Freedom from Fear is a comprehensive and colorful account of the most convulsive period in American history, excepting only the Civil War--a period that formed the crucible in which modern America was created.

(From the book jacket)
 
Copyright: 1999, Oxford University Press

 

Biography

A native of Seattle, David M. Kennedy, currently a Donald J. McLachlan Professor of History, has taught history at Stanford University since 1967. He has been a visiting professor at the University of Florence, Italy, and in 1995-96 served as the Harmsworth Professor of American History at Oxford University. He is the author of Birth Control in America: The Career of Margaret Sanger (1970), which won the Bancroft Prize, Over Here: The First World War and American Society (1980), which was a Pulitzer Prize finalist, and with Thomas A. Bailey and Lizabeth Cohen, The American Pageant (11th ed., 1998), an American history textbook.

Mr. Kennedy lives in Stanford,...

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The Jury

Henry F. Graff (chair)

professor emeritus of history, Columbia University

John M. Cooper Jr.

E. Gordon Fox Professor of American Institutions, University of Wisconsin, Madison

Jack Rakove

Coe Professor of History and American Studies, Stanford University, Stanford

Winners in History

Cuba: An American History, by Ada Ferrer (Scribner)

2000 Prize Winners