Everybody Is Sitting on the Curb: How and Why America's Heroes Disappeared / Edition 1

Everybody Is Sitting on the Curb: How and Why America's Heroes Disappeared / Edition 1

by Alan Edelstein
ISBN-10:
0275953645
ISBN-13:
9780275953645
Pub. Date:
06/21/1996
Publisher:
Bloomsbury Academic
ISBN-10:
0275953645
ISBN-13:
9780275953645
Pub. Date:
06/21/1996
Publisher:
Bloomsbury Academic
Everybody Is Sitting on the Curb: How and Why America's Heroes Disappeared / Edition 1

Everybody Is Sitting on the Curb: How and Why America's Heroes Disappeared / Edition 1

by Alan Edelstein

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Overview

The traditional American hero has disappeared and is unlikely to returban. Dr. Edelstein explains in fascinating detail how and why that disappearance occurred and the consequences for the nation. Using a sociological approach, he examines the changes that have taken place within American society since World War II to bring about the demise of heroes.

The United States has run out of heroes. Hero refers to a national hero, a Universal American around whom we all would rally if called. The hero is the man—rarely the woman—who inspires children and adults, and reflects the finest qualities of the American people. He is recognized as an inspiration, seen as someone engendering our best qualities. It is not that the hero represents most if not all Americans; it is that most if not all Americans are happy to have him as their representative. This is the man, the role, gone from our lives, permanently.

Edelstein gives a vivid description of heroes of America's past, and offers an explanation of the national appeal of such men as Billy the Kid, Babe Ruth, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Martin Luther King, Jr. He describes how many of the fields from which Americans once drew their heroes have disappeared, and how the structures of other fields that were once sources of heroes have been altered, thereby obstructing the creation of new heroes. Not that heroism is dead. To the contrary, many Americans are often found performing heroic acts: police officers and fire fighters, federal agents and everyday people are regularly commended for committing acts above and beyond the call of duty. But these heroic actions are usually noted only on a local level. To be an American hero is to be a national hero. This is accomplished by an act of an individual that demands and receives national attention. But that doesn't seem to happen anymore. It is difficult to recall the last ticker-tape parade for an individual American hero. Parades now celebrate groups: freed hostages, winning sports teams, returbaning service personnel. The book concludes with a discussion on the ramifications of the disappearance of the American hero.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780275953645
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 06/21/1996
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 272
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 0.62(d)
Lexile: 1260L (what's this?)

About the Author

ALAN EDELSTEIN is Associate Professor of Sociology at Towson State University and the author of An Unacknowledged Harmony: Philo-Semitism and the Survival of European Jewry (Greenwood, 1982).

Table of Contents

The Problem
No More Heroes
The Gulf War and Its Aftermath
Understanding the American Hero
America's Past Heroes
Introduction
Military Heroes
Sports Heroes
Political Heroes
Entertainment Heroes
The Heroes of the American West
Intermediate American Heroes
Lesser American Heroes
Addendum: Why Few Heroic American Women Are Recognized as Heroes
Conclusion
Why America's Heroes Have Disappeared
Introduction
Values
Bureaucracy, Rationality, and the American Hero
The Effects of Homogeneity, Heterogeneity, and Population on the American Hero
Addendum: Adolescents Take Over
The Media and Heroes
In Conclusion: Americans and the American Hero at the End of the Twentieth Century
Bibliography
Index

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