How - and why - have Americans struggled to make sense of consumption, morality, democracy, and capitalism? Horowitz elegantly and insightfully explores America's preeminent 20th-century answers. Weaving influential ideas about consumption through the fabric of American social, cultural, economic, and political life, he carefully and clearly explains how each interacted with the others.... To the expected list of consumer culture critics that includes Lewis Mumford, Daniel Bell, Christopher Lasch, and Rachel Carson, Horowitz astutely adds such high-profile social activists as Betty Friedan and Martin Luther King Jr., and the manner in which appraisals of consumer culture shaped their thinking. Horowitz even provides a rare look at a political figure (President Jimmy Carter) engaging leading intellectuals while pondering his sense of national malaise due to crushing materialism. For balance, Horowitz includes thinkers who either celebrate consumption or accept it as natural and inevitable. A volume of exceptional accessibility and clarity. - Choice ""Magisterial, well-researched, and carefully nuanced.... Horowitz describes an era when Americans, and especially social scientists, believed in the notion of national character and mobilized it in various ways on behalf of arguments against hedonism, status-seeking, and self-fulfillment by means of indulgent consumption.... The Anxieties of Affluence is an essential book for social scientists and students of American culture."" - History: Reviews of New Books ""Horowitz deftly elucidates some of the most important works of the mid-twentieth century concerned with consumer abundance and its moral and political significance. The writing is always accessible, and the whole work offers a crystal clear overview and analysis of the meanings 'affluence' had in a crucial period of the past century."" - Howard Brick, author of Age of Contradiction: American Thought and Culture in the 1960s ""An impressive and important book.... In a field that is sometimes flooded with abstractions, Horowitz's approach - which focuses on specific people, debates, and texts - is welcome. There has been surprisingly little scholarship on post-World War II American consumer society, and this book certainly is the most thorough that I know of."" - Lawrence B. Glickman, author of A Living Wage: American Workers and the Making of Consumer Society