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WASPS

The Splendors and Miseries of an American Aristocracy

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
An examination of WASP culture through the lives of some of its most prominent figures.
From politics to fashion, their style still intrigues us. WASPs produced brilliant reformers—Eleanor, Theodore, and Franklin Roosevelt—and inspired Cold Warriors—Dean Acheson, Averell Harriman, and Joe Alsop.
Yet they were unhappy. Descended from families that created the United States, WASPs felt themselves stunted by a civilization that thwarted their higher aspirations at every turn. They were the original lost generation.
Yet out of the neurotic ruins emerged a group of patriots devoted to public service and the renewal of society. In a study of the WASP revolution in American life, Michael Knox Beran brings the stories of Henry Adams and Henry Stimson, Learned Hand and Vida Scudder, John Jay Chapman and Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney to life. These characters were driven by a vision of human completeness, one that distinguishes them from the self-complacency of more recent power establishments founded on money and technical know-how.
WASPs shaped the America in which we live: so much so that it isn't easy to understand our problems without a knowledge of their mistakes.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      June 21, 2021
      This colorful survey from biographer Beran (The Last Patrician) traces the rise and fall of the “WASP ideal” from 19th-century New England to the burial of George H.W. Bush in 2018. Identifying the animating impulse of WASP culture as the belief that “patrician privilege... could be justified through meritorious public service,” Beran spotlights American political dynasties including the Roosevelts, Kennedys, and Harrimans, and delves into the role that elite institutions including Groton and Harvard played in shaping America’s ruling class. Henry Adams’s romantic travails and “failure as a public man” are discussed, as are the philanthropic inclinations of J.P. Morgan and other WASPs who “were never more comfortable with art than when it was safely shut away in a glass case.” Beran also depicts Franklin Roosevelt’s efforts to chart a middle course between “reform WASPs” and “Wall Street WASPs” during the Great Depression, and describes how the Vietnam War, public scandals, and scathing takedowns by outsiders including Truman Capote permanently tarnished the WASP image in the 1960s. Beran stuffs the account with juicy details, though the constant name-dropping and tossed-off literary allusions can be aggravating. Still, this is a rewarding study of a vital yet slippery aspect of American history and culture.

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  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

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  • English

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