The Cities on the Hill
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About The Book

Over the second half of the 20th century American politics was reorganized around race as the tenuous New Deal coalition frayed and eventually collapsed. What drove this change? In The Cities on the Hill Thomas Ogorzalek argues that the answer lies not in the sectional divide between North and South but in the differences between how different kinds of places govern themselves. Using a wide range of evidence from Congress and an original dataset measuring the urbanicity of districts over time he shows how the trajectory of partisan politics in America today was set in the very beginning of the New Deal. Both rural and urban America were riven with local racial conflict but beginning in the 1930s city leaders became increasingly unified in national politics and supportive of civil rights- and sowed the seeds of modern liberalism. As Ogorzalek powerfully demonstrates the red and blue shades of contemporary political geography derive more from rural and urban perspectives than clean state or regional lines. Moreover his analysis explains how city institutions can help build bridges over the divides that keep us apart.
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