In this episode of Explaining History, Nick explores the unprecedented explosion of wealth and consumption in post-war America. We often focus on the economic decline of the middle class in recent decades, but today we look back at the era of mass abundance that preceded it.
Drawing on James Patterson’s Grand Expectations, we delve into the cultural and economic forces that transformed a nation scarred by the Depression into a land of “gleaming kitchen conveniences” and tail-finned cars. From the futuristic designs of General Motors to the utopian promises of the atomic age, we examine how prosperity reshaped the American psyche. But beneath the chrome and the optimism lay a new kind of anxiety—one medicated by a booming pharmaceutical industry and shadowed by the fear that this golden age might be unrepeatable.
Plus: Stay tuned for an update on our upcoming live masterclass on Stalinist Russia for students!
Key Topics:
- The Post-War Boom: Why America was uniquely positioned to prosper after 1945.
- Car Culture: How the automobile became the ultimate symbol of freedom and status.
- Atomic Optimism: The belief that science could solve everything, from weather control to disease.
- The Anxiety of Affluence: The rise of tranquilizers and the darker side of the American D

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