The six great societies
“The Great Society” denotes, variously: a slogan or shorthand, a utopia, a means, an end, an era, and a set of normative claims. This paper tracks the changing meanings of “The Great Society” in order to clarify and formalize scholarly claims about the Johnson administration. Employing Edward Sapir’...
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Wiley
2015
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author | Hackett, U |
author_facet | Hackett, U |
author_sort | Hackett, U |
collection | OXFORD |
description | “The Great Society” denotes, variously: a slogan or shorthand, a utopia, a means, an end, an era, and a set of normative claims. This paper tracks the changing meanings of “The Great Society” in order to clarify and formalize scholarly claims about the Johnson administration. Employing Edward Sapir’s conception of ‘condensation symbols and Keith Donnellan’s distinction between “referential” and “attributive” descriptions, I create a typology of six Great Societies and trace the origins and deployment of these six meanings through qualitative textual analysis of presidential speeches, newspapers and scholarly writings. Attributive uses of the term gave way to referential uses in the late 1960s, as radical movements and practical implementation problems eclipsed utopian visions of a great society. The analysis illuminates Johnson’s character and contributes to the literature on the rhetorical presidency by demonstrating the importance of context, ambiguity and the attribution of descriptive content to political slogans. |
first_indexed | 2024-03-06T20:13:40Z |
format | Journal article |
id | oxford-uuid:2b6bf08c-1a19-452d-a98f-d2c27def151b |
institution | University of Oxford |
last_indexed | 2024-03-06T20:13:40Z |
publishDate | 2015 |
publisher | Wiley |
record_format | dspace |
spelling | oxford-uuid:2b6bf08c-1a19-452d-a98f-d2c27def151b2022-03-26T12:30:50ZThe six great societiesJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:2b6bf08c-1a19-452d-a98f-d2c27def151bSymplectic Elements at OxfordWiley2015Hackett, U“The Great Society” denotes, variously: a slogan or shorthand, a utopia, a means, an end, an era, and a set of normative claims. This paper tracks the changing meanings of “The Great Society” in order to clarify and formalize scholarly claims about the Johnson administration. Employing Edward Sapir’s conception of ‘condensation symbols and Keith Donnellan’s distinction between “referential” and “attributive” descriptions, I create a typology of six Great Societies and trace the origins and deployment of these six meanings through qualitative textual analysis of presidential speeches, newspapers and scholarly writings. Attributive uses of the term gave way to referential uses in the late 1960s, as radical movements and practical implementation problems eclipsed utopian visions of a great society. The analysis illuminates Johnson’s character and contributes to the literature on the rhetorical presidency by demonstrating the importance of context, ambiguity and the attribution of descriptive content to political slogans. |
spellingShingle | Hackett, U The six great societies |
title | The six great societies |
title_full | The six great societies |
title_fullStr | The six great societies |
title_full_unstemmed | The six great societies |
title_short | The six great societies |
title_sort | six great societies |
work_keys_str_mv | AT hackettu thesixgreatsocieties AT hackettu sixgreatsocieties |