"Demographic Angst convincingly places movies at the center of complex cultural tensions and shifts within post-World War II America. Nadel's discussion of this topic is unprecedented."
~Timothy Corrigan, co-author of The Film Experience: An Introduction
"Demographic Angst offers an encyclopedic account of questions central to modern American culture and society. There is no doubt that the lessons of this book are now more urgent than ever before."
~Kate Baldwin, author of Beyond the Color Line and the Iron Curtain: Reading Encounters between Black and Red
"The fun and interest of this book, despite its account of a grim post WWII American angst, comes in the unusual combination of films at play: from Singin in the Rain to The Invasion of the Body Snatchers, from Lina Lamont to Norma Desmond to Margo Channing, Nadel’s insightful study reveals the bizarre disquiet of an age in which men could only preserve their innocence by putting women in their place."
~Linda Williams, author of On The Wire
"Revisiting the early Cold War period, Demographic Angst offers illuminating historical perspectives on a dozen classic films. Well researched and always engaging, this is a perfect meeting of American studies and film studies."
~Steven Cohan, author of The Sound of Musicals
"Explores newly emergent cultural anxieties as worked through in such films as Singin' in the Rain, On the Waterfront, and Sunset Boulevard."
~Chronicle
"Engaging and thought-provoking."
~Philadelphia Inquirer
"Nadel’s meticulously worked out argument puts Maher’s casual polemic on a solid foundation. As much as the book promises to enjoy longevity as an intelligent, well-informed, and insightful study of America in the Fifties, taking its place among landmarks studies like May’s Homeward Bound, critical understanding of Fifties-style identity politics as Nadel presents it in Demographic Angst might also inform the debate of contemporary politics—a politics which, incidentally, is similarly rife with “demographic angst” as that in the Fifties."
~Cercles