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Popular Front. Bernstein’s political affiliations weren’t as overtly linked to movements which were reframed by McCarthy and others like him as the enemy after the War. References Auerbach, J.S. (1995), ‘Liberalism, Judaism, and American Jews: A Response’ in Seltzer, R.M., Cohen, N.J. (eds.), The Americanization of the Jews. New York, USA: NYU Press, pp. 144-148. Banks Hindman, D. & Wiegand, K. (2008), ‘The Big Three’s Prime-Time Decline: A Technological and Social Context’, Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media, 52(1), pp. 119-135. Bayor, R. H. (1986), ‘Klan, Coughlinites and Aryan Nations: Patterns of American Anti- Semitism in the Twentieth Century’, Jewish American History, 76(2), pp.181-196. Bose, S. (2006), ‘Lenny’s Little Chats: Envy the children who learned music from the maestro, Leonard Bernstein’, The American Scholar, 75(1), pp. 117-121. Dickstein, M. (2005) ‘Copland and American Populism in the 1930s’ in Oja, C.J., Tick, J. (eds.), Aaron Copland and His World. Princeton, New Jersey, USA: Princeton University Press, pp. 81-98. Hartford, K. (2016) ‘A Common Man for the Cold War: Aaron Copland’s Old American Songs’, The Musical Quarterly, 98(4), pp.313-349. Hartman, H. & Hartman, M. (2011) ‘Jewish Identity and the Secular Achievements of American Jewish Men and Women’, Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, 50(1), pp. 133-153. Levy, B.E. (2005) ‘From Orient to Occident: Aaron Copland and the Sagas of the Prairie’ in Oja, C.J., Tick, J. (eds.), Aaron Copland and His World. Princeton, New Jersey, USA: Princeton University Press, pp. 307-340. Seldes, B. (2009) Leonard Bernstein: The Political Life of an American Musician. Berkeley and Los Angeles, California, USA: University of California Press. Vasquez Heilig, J. Et al. (2010) ‘From Dewey to No Child Left Behind: The Evolution and Devolution of Public Arts Education’, Arts Education Policy Review, 111(4), pp.136-145. 145