American social policy during the Second Red Scare

During its Second Red Scare (1947-1957) a distinct set of domestic policies and traditional social mores came to dominate popular culture and interpersonal relations in the United States of America.

The Post–World War II "baby boom"

In the aftermath of World War II the birth rate spiked in the United States as millions of young men were discharged from the armed forces and began to establish new households. This "baby boom" significantly increased the number of families in the United States. The suburban, heterosexual family, based upon a white-collar male breadwinner and a wife limited to domestic pursuits came to be regarded as a social ideal.

Traditional explanations for the rise of this postwar family ideal focus on economic means: The GI bill increased soldiers' access to college education, greatly expanding college enrollment. In 1947, veterans accounted for 49 percent of college admissions.[1] The bill also increased access to low-interest home loans contributing to a large increase in home ownership: from 1944–1952, the Veterans Administration “supported nearly 2.4 million home loans for World War II veterans.”[1] However, closer examination shows that many people were left out of this new economic prosperity. Minorities who did not fit the ideal (including racial minorities, feminists, and homosexuals) were suppressed, unable to assert autonomy, and therefore contained.

The GI Bill’s provisions for increased college enrollment disproportionately benefited white men because of college segregation. African American men were eligible for the home loans but many were prevented from buying houses in suburban areas because of redlining and other segregation techniques.

Other members of society who were excluded from the postwar ideal of middle-class employment and home ownership included, among others, women and Asians. Women who had worked in factories to support the economy during World War II were pressured to leave the workforce and become housewives. Japanese people released from the World War II internment camps returned home to find their property confiscated.

Proponents of domestic containment invoked the threat of communism to justify suppressing all elements of society that didn’t meet their vision of a stable family. These elements were deemed subversive and linked to communism as a threat to national security.

Aspects of post-war social policy

See also

Footnotes

  1. 1 2 "Education and Training". gibill.va.gov. United States Department of Veterans Affairs. Retrieved August 2, 2016.
  2. The History of the Bikini
  3. Anne Moody, Coming of Age in Mississippi (New York: Dell Publishing, 1968): 117
  4. FAMILY ON TELEVISION - The Museum of Broadcast Communications
  5. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2008-12-12. Retrieved 2008-12-10.
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