Lawrence B. Glickman
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Lawrence B. Glickman teaches post-Civil War American history, with special interests in labor history, cultural history, and the history of consumer society.

Professor Glickman regularly teaches surveys of US History since the Civil War; lecture courses on the United States in the Gilded Age and Progressive Era, and the United States in the Twentieth Century; undergraduate seminars in labor, cultural, and consumer history; as well as a variety of graduate seminars, including one on the comparative history of consumer societies. His first book, A Living Wage: American Workers and the Making of Consumer Society (Cornell 1997; paperback, 1999) examine the role that workers played in the development of consumer society in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. His edited anthology, Consumer Society in American History: A Reader (Cornell 1999) is designed to introduce students to key readings in the field.

Current Activities

I have recently published two books, both from the University of Chicago Press. The Cultural Turn in U.S. History is an anthology (co-edited with James Cook and Michael O’ Malley), explores the history of cultural history in the United States, examines recent trends, and develops new agendas. Buying Power: A History of Consumer Activism in America traces changes and continuities in this long-lasting but relatively unexamined American political tradition of boycotting and buycotting.

I am also continuing research a number of topics including trans-Atlantic radicalism in the nineteenth century, sports radicalism in the 1960s and 1970s, and the transformation of American liberalism from the 1870s through the 1940s. I am also continuing to chart the “cultural turn” in U.S. history as well as the history of consumer politics.

Blog Entries by Lawrence B. Glickman

Consumer Protection Redux: The Lessons of History

Posted September 7, 2009 | 23:24:39 (EST)

"We're proposing a new and powerful agency charged with just one job: looking out for ordinary consumers," said the president on June 17th. The centerpiece of his proposed overhaul of the nation's financial system, the Consumer Financial Protection Agency (CFPA), is designed to end what the president called "failure of...government...

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