Making the International Mind: Social Engineering for U.S. Global Power, 1898-1950
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Robert A. Jones '59 Conference Room148 Hillcrest Road
Middlebury, VT 05753 View in Campus Map
Open to the Public
Lecture by Talya Zemach-Bersin, American Studies, Yale University.
Americans in the first half of the twentieth century embraced a surge of utopian enthusiasm for social engineering. They launched a far-reaching effort to usher in a new era of US global power by adjusting the psychologies and personalities of young Americans. Described after World War I as “mental disarmament” and after World War II as a “Manhattan Project of the Mind,” the theory proposed that the inner lives of human beings could be conditioned and controlled to order a dysfunctional modern world and lead to a harmonious world order created under US leadership. This talk examines the historical contexts and social scientific theories that inspired youth-focused experiments in social engineering.
Sponsored by Rohatyn Center for Global Affairs, International Programs and Off-campus Study
- Sponsored by:
- International Programs & Off Campus Study and Rohatyn Center for Global Affairs
Contact Organizer
Tate, Charlotte
tate@middlebury.edu
(802) 443-5795