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Freemarket Socialists European Migrs Who Made Capitalist Culture In America 19181968 Joseph Malherek

  • SKU: BELL-51922822
Freemarket Socialists European Migrs Who Made Capitalist Culture In America 19181968 Joseph Malherek
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Freemarket Socialists European Migrs Who Made Capitalist Culture In America 19181968 Joseph Malherek instant download after payment.

Publisher: Central European University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 3.31 MB
Pages: 405
Author: Joseph Malherek
ISBN: 9789633864487, 9633864488
Language: English
Year: 2022

Product desciption

Freemarket Socialists European Migrs Who Made Capitalist Culture In America 19181968 Joseph Malherek by Joseph Malherek 9789633864487, 9633864488 instant download after payment.

The Hungarian artist-designer László Moholy-Nagy, the Austrian sociologist Paul Lazarsfeld, and his fellow Viennese Victor Gruen—an architect and urban planner—made careers in different fields. Yet they shared common socialist politics, Jewish backgrounds, and experience as refugees from the Nazis. This book tells the story of their intellectual migration from Central Europe to the United States, beginning with the collapse of the Habsburg Empire, and moving through the heady years of newly independent social-democratic republics before the descent into fascism. It follows their experience of exile and adaptation in a new country, and culminates with a surprising outcome of socialist thinking: the opening of the first fully enclosed, air-conditioned suburban shopping center in the United States. Although the American culture they encountered ostensibly celebrated entrepreneurial individualism and capitalistic “free enterprise,” Moholy-Nagy, Lazarsfeld, and Gruen arrived at a time of the progressive economic reforms of the New Deal and an extraordinary open-mindedness about social democracy. This period of unprecedented economic experimentation nurtured a business climate that, for the most part, did not stifle the émigrés’ socialist idealism but rather channeled it as the source of creative solutions to the practical problems of industrial design, urban planning, and consumer behavior.


Based on a vast array of original sources, Malherek interweaves the biographies of these three remarkable personalities and those of their wives, colleagues, and friends with whom they collaborated on innovative projects that would shape the material environment and consumer culture of their adopted home. The result is a narrative of immigration and adaptation that challenges the crude binary of capitalism and socialism with a story of creative economic hybridization.

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