Description

Book Synopsis
In the years 1967-1971, Senator Margaret Chase Smith was the only female member of the Senate and her reputation of integrity and independent thinking attracted the attention of those seeking to understand and voice their opinion on the Vietnam War experience. Dear Senator Smith is an edited collection of letters that shed light on the far-reaching and polarized tensions that exploded on the scene during Lyndon Johnson''s government and continued into Richard Nixon''s administration. These letters written by ordinary people living in Maine touch on class, race, gender, foreign policy, patriotism, and dissent and provide valuable insight on the impact of the war on the home front, the threat of communism, and the strength of the anti-war movement. By going beyond the circle of political and anti-war elites, Dear Senator Smith shows how ordinary small-town Americans upheld or protested Cold War ideology, offered new paradigms, and generally experienced the new challenges that correlated

Trade Review
An interesting and very informative book about the life and times of Margaret Chase Smith during the years of Vietnam. Offers a significant element to our understanding of her relations with her constituents. -- Christian P. Potholm
With the United States now embroiled in another protracted, controversial war, the letters in Dear Senator Smith seem familiar for their collective expression of the toll war takes on the home front. Eric Crouse has done well to recover a wide range of voices from small town Maine—voices of anger, confusion, and anguish—that echo loudly today. -- Michael S. Foley, College of Staten Island, CUNY, and editor of Dear Dr. Spock: Letters About the Vietnam War to America's Favorite Baby Doctor
Eric Crouse has put together a fascinating volume of letters from small-town Maine to their senator regarding the Vietnam War. Arranged chronologically and thematically, the letters are illuminated by Crouse's carefully researched 'editor's notes' which set the context and explain references in the letters. These missives reflect the heartfelt and often poignant views of ordinary people trying to come to terms with a costly and unpopular war. Especially in the light of our involvement in yet another costly and unpopular war, these letters speak not only to their own time but to ours. -- Janann Sherman, University of Memphis and author of No Place for a Woman: A Life of Senator Margaret Chase Smith

Table of Contents
Chapter 1 Introduction Part 2 Part One - The Johnson Years, 1967-68 Chapter 3 Chapter 1. A Growing War Chapter 4 Chapter 2. A Worried Nation Chapter 5 Chapter 3. Rising Opposition Part 6 Part Two - The Nixon Years, 1969-71 Chapter 7 Chapter 4. Nothing New Under the Sun Chapter 8 Chapter 5. Cambodia Fireflash Chapter 9 Chapter 6. Winding Down Road Chapter 10 Conclusion

Dear Senator Smith

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      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 6/9/2008 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780739124857, 978-0739124857
      ISBN10: 0739124854

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      In the years 1967-1971, Senator Margaret Chase Smith was the only female member of the Senate and her reputation of integrity and independent thinking attracted the attention of those seeking to understand and voice their opinion on the Vietnam War experience. Dear Senator Smith is an edited collection of letters that shed light on the far-reaching and polarized tensions that exploded on the scene during Lyndon Johnson''s government and continued into Richard Nixon''s administration. These letters written by ordinary people living in Maine touch on class, race, gender, foreign policy, patriotism, and dissent and provide valuable insight on the impact of the war on the home front, the threat of communism, and the strength of the anti-war movement. By going beyond the circle of political and anti-war elites, Dear Senator Smith shows how ordinary small-town Americans upheld or protested Cold War ideology, offered new paradigms, and generally experienced the new challenges that correlated

      Trade Review
      An interesting and very informative book about the life and times of Margaret Chase Smith during the years of Vietnam. Offers a significant element to our understanding of her relations with her constituents. -- Christian P. Potholm
      With the United States now embroiled in another protracted, controversial war, the letters in Dear Senator Smith seem familiar for their collective expression of the toll war takes on the home front. Eric Crouse has done well to recover a wide range of voices from small town Maine—voices of anger, confusion, and anguish—that echo loudly today. -- Michael S. Foley, College of Staten Island, CUNY, and editor of Dear Dr. Spock: Letters About the Vietnam War to America's Favorite Baby Doctor
      Eric Crouse has put together a fascinating volume of letters from small-town Maine to their senator regarding the Vietnam War. Arranged chronologically and thematically, the letters are illuminated by Crouse's carefully researched 'editor's notes' which set the context and explain references in the letters. These missives reflect the heartfelt and often poignant views of ordinary people trying to come to terms with a costly and unpopular war. Especially in the light of our involvement in yet another costly and unpopular war, these letters speak not only to their own time but to ours. -- Janann Sherman, University of Memphis and author of No Place for a Woman: A Life of Senator Margaret Chase Smith

      Table of Contents
      Chapter 1 Introduction Part 2 Part One - The Johnson Years, 1967-68 Chapter 3 Chapter 1. A Growing War Chapter 4 Chapter 2. A Worried Nation Chapter 5 Chapter 3. Rising Opposition Part 6 Part Two - The Nixon Years, 1969-71 Chapter 7 Chapter 4. Nothing New Under the Sun Chapter 8 Chapter 5. Cambodia Fireflash Chapter 9 Chapter 6. Winding Down Road Chapter 10 Conclusion

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