¶ … President Lyndon B. Johnson Describes Great Society" Michael P. Johnson's Reading American Past (pg.
The historical epoch in which Lyndon B. Johnson conceived of and attempted to implement the Great Society represented a critical period in the history of America. Johnson began his presidency after the assassination of John F. Kennedy during the turbulent 1960's in which unresolved issues of poverty and race threatened to quite literally tear the country apart. Some of these very issues were similar ones faced by Franklin Delano Roosevelt during the beginning of his lengthy tenure as president in which he attempted to restore America from the throes of the Great Depression. Johnson's Great Society was devised to provide answers to many of these problems, and to foster a new way of thinking about both the U.S. And the responsibilities of its citizens in a way that was every bit as pragmatic as it was ideal.
The goals of the Great Society were manifold, and essentially revolved around three critical components -- those pertaining to urban areas, rural areas, and to classrooms. All of these components were fastened with an ideology that literally attempted to raise the standards of the country and of those who lived in it, in which the full potential of both was actually achieved. The degree of idealism that accompanied Johnson's purported reforms in these areas was palpable, particularly for those relating to rural areas. Throughout his May 22, 1964 address to the University of Michigan the president defined an aesthetic in which beauty of the mind and...
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