Citations:culture war


 * 2000, Sally Robinson, Marked Men: White Masculinity in Crisis, Columbia University Press (ISBN 9780231500364), page :
 * A key term of the conservative insurgency of the late eighties and nineties, “culture war” is often used as a catchphrase to capture a widespread, vaguely apprehended, baggy monster of a cultural condition that is characterized by violent mass culture, single-mother homes, promiscuity, and a general decline of what conservatives term “traditional values”.


 * 2007, Frederick Turner, Culture of Hope: A New Birth of the Classical Spirit, Simon and Schuster (ISBN 9781416576853), page :
 * Avant-garde leftist artists and intellectuals see the culture war as an assault by evil fascistic conservatives upon the freedom of artistic expression, an attack based on patriarchal white Western values.


 * 2009, Claire Greslé-Favier, "Raising Sexually Pure Kids": Sexual Abstinence, Conservative Christians and American Politics, Rodopi (ISBN 9789042026780), page :
 * The concept, or narrative, of a “culture war” that would be dividing the United Sates into two starkly opposite groups of conservatives and “liberals” is familiar to observers of US politics at least since the early 1990s, when it was popularised by Pat Buchanan at the Republican National Convention.


 * 2013, Wayne E. Baker, America's Crisis of Values: Reality and Perception, Princeton University Press (ISBN 9781400849628), page :
 * This chapter explores the distribution hypothesis: the popular theory that America is engaged in a culture war, an apocalyptic vision of Americans taking sides in a battle between incompatible views of the American way of life.