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CPH Book Prize Lecture: The Poverty of the World: Rediscovering the Poor at Home and Abroad, 1941-1968

February 20, 2025 @ 6:00 pm - 7:30 pm

Professor Sheyda Jahanbani (Kansas University) joins the CPH to speak about her new book The Poverty of the World: Rediscovering the Poor at Home and Abroad, 1941-1968 which was the winner of the 2024 CPH Book Prize Award. Her book examines the origins and impacts of the war on poverty, revealing connections between U.S. domestic and foreign policy between the the Second World War and the Vietnam War. It shines new light on the lives, philosophies, and global ambitions of major figures of the period including Sargent Shriver, John Kenneth Galbraith, and Michael Harrington.

In the middle of the twentieth century, liberal intellectuals and policymakers in the United States came to see poverty as a global problem. Applying Progressive era and Depression insights about the causes of poverty to the post-World War II challenges posed by the Cold War and decolonization, they developed new ideas about why poverty persisted. The problem, they argued, was that the poor at home and abroad were alienated from the enormous opportunities industrial capitalism provided. Left unsolved, that problem, they believed, would threaten world peace.

In The Poverty of the World, Sheyda Jahanbani brings together the histories of US foreign relations and domestic politics to explain why, during a period of unprecedented affluence, Americans rediscovered poverty and supported major policy initiative to combat it. Revisiting a moment of triumph for American liberals in the 1940s, Jahanbani shows how the US’s newfound role as a global superpower prompted novel ideas among liberal thinkers about how to address poverty and generated new urgency for trying to do so. Their sense of responsibility about deploying American knowledge and wealth as a beneficent force in the world, produced such foreign aid programs as the Peace Corps. As Americans came to recognize the problem beyond the country’s borders, they turned the idea of “underdevelopment” inward to explain poverty in urban neighborhoods and rural communities at home, inspiring Lyndon Johnson’s War on Poverty and his domestic peace corps, Volunteers in Service to America (VISTA).

Drawing on a wide variety of archival material, Jahanbani reinterprets the lives and work of prominent liberal figures in postwar American social politics, from Oscar Lewis to John Kenneth Galbraith, Michael Harrington to Sargent Shriver, to show the global origins of their ideas. By tracing how American liberals invented the problem of “global poverty” and executed a war against it, The Poverty of the World sheds new light on the domestic impacts of the Cold War, the global ambitions of American liberalism, and the way in which key intellectuals and policymakers worked to develop an alternative vision of US empire in the decades after World War II.

The CPH Book Prize committee was unanimous in their praise for Jahanbani’s work, calling it “innovative,” “an historiographical and methodological triumph,” and a new “standard volume in 20th century history.” It draws together intellectual history and the histories of U.S. foreign relations and domestic politics to explain how and why mid-century Americans focused on poverty as a global problem to solve, and then brought those ideas back home. Oxford UP’s description is right: the book “sheds new light on the domestic impacts of the Cold War, the global ambitions of American liberalism, and the way in which key intellectuals and policymakers worked to develop an alternative vision of US empire in the decades after World War II.”

Details

Date:
February 20, 2025
Time:
6:00 pm - 7:30 pm

Venue

Dallas Hall 306 (McCord Auditorium)
3225 University Blvd
Dallas, TX 75205 United States
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