Abstract

Robert Putman’s The Upswing (written with Shaylyn Romney Garrett) provides a powerful meta-analysis of American social, political, economic and cultural change throughout the twentieth century. What this analysis reveals is the existence of an almost perfect arc of social progress which begins from a low position around the Gilded Age at the beginning of the twentieth century and then climbs across all variables until reaching a highpoint around 1960. The Progressive Era, Putnam argues, engineered an ‘upswing’ against inequality, polarisation, social disarray and a culture of self-centredness. Since then, however, the data suggest that a severe downswing has occurred which explains the existence of deep divisions and polarised politics in the United States. Putnam’s core argument is simple: The United States has pulled itself out of a trough before and it can do it again. In a post-Trump context, this argument could hardly be more welcome which may explain the rave reviews this book has generally received. Nevertheless, the core weakness of The Upswing is that it arguably tells us far more about how the United States ‘came together a century ago’ but far less about how it ‘can do it again’ in the future.

Highlights

  • Robert Putman’s The Upswing provides a powerful metaanalysis of American social, political, economic and cultural change throughout the twentieth century

  • Even the most cursory analysis of the vast body of scholarship which has in recent years attempted to trace the ‘end’, ‘death’, ‘decline’, ‘suicide’, ‘crisis’, or ‘twilight’ of democracy reveals a predominantly problem-orientated approach

  • The first is that across a range of dimensions, the data suggest that the United States has lost any sense of balance and is, in effect, plumbing new depths when it comes to inequality, unfairness and individualism

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Summary

Introduction

Robert Putman’s The Upswing (written with Shaylyn Romney Garrett) provides a powerful metaanalysis of American social, political, economic and cultural change throughout the twentieth century. The first is that across a range of dimensions (economics, politics, society, culture, race and gender), the data suggest that the United States has lost any sense of balance and is, in effect, plumbing new depths when it comes to inequality, unfairness and individualism.

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