Century of Difference
About This Book
Winner of the 2007 Otis Dudley Duncan Award for Outstanding Scholarship in Social Demography
"Claude S. Fischer and Michael Hout have written an imaginative chronicle of the century that just ended. While there are palpable differences in how the country looked in 1900 and 2000, they point to some striking similarities ... [They] argue that the amount of schooling a person receives now overshadows nativity, race, or income as the nation's prime divide. 'Since mid-century,' they suggest, 'education became a key sorter of Americans.' 'Differences in living standards and lifestyles' between those with a bachelor's degree and those without it 'had widened greatly.' The years ahead, they say, will see a deep divide separating 'education haves and have-nots.' While this is a widely accepted view, it hasn't had the scrutiny it needs."
-THE NEW YORK REVIEW OF BOOKS
"Century of Difference is extraordinarily ambitious. Claude S. Fischer and Michael Hout set out to describe the key changes in American society over the course of a century, focusing on family composition, urbanization and suburbanization, income, employment, race and ethnicity, religion, and the culture wars. Their main challenge was to identify the salient changes in American society and to describe them clearly, showing how different subpopulations were affected. The book succeeds brilliantly. The writing is remarkably engaging, even though it is all about numbers. This will become a classic of historical sociology."
-STEVEN RUGGLES, University of Minnesota
"This landmark study carefully charts major social changes over the twentieth century that have profoundly affected our American lives. Like all good sociology, it provides a big picture interpretation that helps us better understand our own experiences in the context of larger social realities. History here illuminates the important, current trajectories of life. Century of Difference will serve social scientists and historians alike for many years to come as the authoritative reference on the previous century's key social changes."
-CHRISTIAN SMITH, University of Notre Dame
"Claude S. Fischer and Michael Hout have written the definitive history of social and economic change in twentieth-century America. They document how we have gone from a society where ethnicity and race shaped our lives to one where education shapes our lives. Must reading for all policymakers and social scientists."
-DORA L. COSTA, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
In every generation, Americans have worried about the solidarity of the nation. Since the days of the Mayflower, those already settled here have wondered how newcomers with different cultures, values, and (frequently) skin color would influence America. Would the new groups create polarization and disharmony? Thus far, the United States has a remarkable track record of incorporating new people into American society, but acceptance and assimilation have never meant equality. In Century of Difference, Claude Fischer and Michael Hout provide a compelling—and often surprising—new take on the divisions and commonalities among the American public over the tumultuous course of the twentieth century.
Using a hundred years worth of census and opinion poll data, Century of Difference shows how the social, cultural, and economic fault lines in American life shifted in the last century. It demonstrates how distinctions that once loomed large later dissipated, only to be replaced by new ones. Fischer and Hout find that differences among groups by education, age, and income expanded, while those by gender, region, national origin, and, even in some ways, race narrowed. As the twentieth century opened, a person’s national origin was of paramount importance, with hostilities running high against Africans, Chinese, and southern and eastern Europeans. Today, diverse ancestries are celebrated with parades. More important than ancestry for today’s Americans is their level of schooling. Americans with advanced degrees are increasingly putting distance between themselves and the rest of society—in both a literal and a figurative sense. Differences in educational attainment are tied to expanding inequalities in earnings, job quality, and neighborhoods. Still, there is much that ties all Americans together. Century of Difference knocks down myths about a growing culture war. Using seventy years of survey data, Fischer and Hout show that Americans did not become more fragmented over values in the late-twentieth century, but rather were united over shared ideals of self-reliance, family, and even religion.
As public debate has flared up over such matters as immigration restrictions, the role of government in redistributing resources to the poor, and the role of religion in public life, it is important to take stock of the divisions and linkages that have typified the U.S. population over time. Century of Difference lucidly profiles the evolution of American social and cultural differences over the last century, examining the shifting importance of education, marital status, race, ancestry, gender, and other factors on the lives of Americans past and present.
CLAUDE S. FISCHER is professor of sociology at the University of California, Berkeley.
MICHAEL HOUT is professor of sociology at the University of California, Berkeley.
A Volume in the RSF Census Series