
Thirty years since it was first published, Macdonald's masterful book on the Ford Foundation remains the only book-length account of this institution that has been published. Despite the calls for a book carrying on the story from 1956 on the part of Richard Magat and McGeorge Bundy, that book has yet to be written. In his stimulating introduction to this new edition, Francis Sutton suggests why this is so. The Foundation, he observes, has never again aroused as much public interest as it did in the years Macdonald's describes. The announcement that a new program would be launched with the riches that 90 percent of the Ford Motor Company's stock would bring captured the attention of the media all across the country. Its sheer size was astounding; in 1954 the Ford Foundation spent four times as much as the Rockefeller Foundation and ten times as much as the Carnegie Corporation. Its expenditures were very large in relation to the budgets of the institutions that looked to it for help. Consequently, the American public waited expectantly to see what this huge foundation would do. But the Ford Foundation was not only big; it was controversial in those years, and inspired activism in the media, Congressional investigations, and political wrath. Macdonald nicely captures the American ambivalence toward large bureacratic organizations, which the Ford Foundation epitomizes, with its own language and, one might argue, its own values. Sutton points out that Macdonald's writing also sets a model for foundation history and indeed philanthropic history, with a poised, ironic detachment that has remained rare. His introduction points out the main themes of Macdonald's book and examines the extent to which they continue to illumine the foundation in the years since this book was first published. It looks at how well the Foundation has addressed the objectives it set for itself, and nicely captures the giant changes that this giant foundation has experienced through the 1960s and
This work investigates the immense influence and controversial early operations of the Ford Foundation during the mid-20th century. Dwight Macdonald, a prominent social critic and journalist, utilizes his sharp analytical lens to examine the foundation's rapid expansion and its complex relationship with American bureaucratic culture. By documenting the foundation's unprecedented financial scale and its subsequent entanglement with Congressional scrutiny, the author provides a critical assessment of how massive philanthropic organizations shape public policy and social values.
What You Will Find
Experts and historians frequently cite this work as a foundational text for understanding the history of American philanthropy due to Macdonald's unique, ironic, and detached prose style. Readers often note that the book remains a singular, comprehensive account of the institution's formative years, providing a standard for how foundation history should be documented.
Page Count:
208
Publication Date:
2017-01-01
Publisher:
Taylor & Francis Group
ISBN-10:
0203791770
ISBN-13:
9780203791776
No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!