Description:
Faith in the American Dream--the idea that anyone who works hard can achieve success--has waned in the 21st century. Decreases in economic mobility, increases in the wealth gap, and other economic shifts have undoubtedly influenced this decline. Politics, however, are an overlooked contributor to confidence, or lack of confidence, in the American Dream. In Debating the American Dream, political scientist Elizabeth Suhay investigates how politics and political identity are intertwined with beliefs about the American Dream and the causes of inequality.
Drawing on public opinion surveys spanning more than four decades, Suhay finds that Americans' belief in the American Dream is strongly related to their political party affiliation. Democratic Party leaders have increasingly questioned the fairness of the American economy, and, in effect, have called into question whether the American Dream is "real." Republican Party leaders, by contrast, have consistently defended the fairness of the economy and the American Dream. While it is true that Americans have become more skeptical of the American Dream overall, Suhay finds this skepticism is concentrated among Democratic members of the public. Despite the increasingly working-class make-up of the Republican coalition, most Republican members of the public continue to believe the American Dream is reality.
Review Quotes: "Debating the American Dream offers our most broadly satisfying account of Americans' differing beliefs about economic inequality and the competing policy preferences that follow from them. Most importantly, it brings the country's cultural ideals down from the clouds to engage with the realities of partisan politics. The book also offers valuable new takes on race, sex, and ideology in American politics. I expect it to be quickly recognized as a landmark contribution."
--John Zaller, professor emeritus of political science, University of California, Los Angeles