
Contents
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On the Advice of Our Elders On the Advice of Our Elders
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Young America and Old Fogeys Young America and Old Fogeys
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Republicans Wake Up Republicans Wake Up
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The Charm of Novelty The Charm of Novelty
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Chasing the High Tide Chasing the High Tide
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Joining the Sage Joining the Sage
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Cite
Abstract
Attracting young people was always a struggle. Parties and politicians could never really engineer millions of young people’s intimate, disorganized political awakenings, driven by deeply personal motivations. Unlike the twenty-one-year-olds who entered democracy in very similar ways from 1840 to 1900, politicians’ tricks evolved over the age of popular politics. Because campaigners were so distant from the average young voter, however, their improvements did not change the nature of popular politics. In the 1880s, popular politics began to show its age, and over the next decade campaign efforts to turn the convenient relationship between young Americans and political parties into something more systematic would cause an early death for the unique political culture.
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