2017
DOI: 10.1386/ejac.36.1.5_1
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Artistic scarcity in an age of material abundance: President Lyndon Johnson, the National Endowment for the Arts, and Great Society liberalism

Abstract: 1965 saw President Lyndon Johnson push an incredible number of reform bills through Congress as part of his quest for a Great Society – including legislation to create a National Endowment for the Arts (the federal agency that provides grants to artists and arts organizations in the United States). Public confidence was riding high, the economy was good, and Americans demonstrated a remarkable faith in the capacity of the federal government to solve domestic problems. And yet in this age of abundance, Johnson … Show more

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“…18. Key historians who have cast US commanders-in-chief as authorial forces shaping arts opportunities and public perceptions of art and artists are Miller and Yúdice (2000), Binkiewicz (2004), andHeath (2017).…”
Section: Endowment and Collective Repairmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…18. Key historians who have cast US commanders-in-chief as authorial forces shaping arts opportunities and public perceptions of art and artists are Miller and Yúdice (2000), Binkiewicz (2004), andHeath (2017).…”
Section: Endowment and Collective Repairmentioning
confidence: 99%