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Linda Bridges, John R., Jr. Coyne
Would there be an American conservative movement without William F. Buckley, Jr.? Perhaps. Would it be the robust, broad-based, politically dominant force that it is today? Almost certainly not. When he launched National Review in 1955, Buckley forged a powerful alliance among libertarians, traditionalists, anti-Communists, and other fractious factions of the right, focusing their attention on a single objective: to break the liberal stranglehold on America. Here, two longtime Buckley colleagues place his many accomplishments in their original contexts for a unique view of the man, the journal, and how they shaped the most important political and social movement of the last half century.--From publisher description.
| Publisher | Wiley |
|---|---|
| Pages | 368 |
| Search language | simple |
| ISBN_10 | 0-471-75817-5 primary |
| ISBN_13 | 978-0-471-75817-4 primary |
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