In lecture four, we examine the rise of conservatism and progressivism in the 1910s and 1920s and their lasting impact on American politics. Focusing on Woodrow Wilson’s top-down, state-centered vision of freedom, we contrast it with the laissez-faire policies of Harding and Coolidge that fueled the economic boom and cultural dynamism of the Roaring Twenties. Dr. Bonevac concludes by highlighting both the era’s remarkable achievements and a growing intellectual elite increasingly at odds with the society it was meant to serve.