The Rise and Fall of the American Left

Author:   John Patrick Diggins
Publisher:   WW Norton & Co
Edition:   New edition
ISBN:  

9780393309171


Pages:   436
Publication Date:   21 April 1993
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Out of print, replaced by POD   Availability explained
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The Rise and Fall of the American Left


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Full Product Details

Author:   John Patrick Diggins
Publisher:   WW Norton & Co
Imprint:   WW Norton & Co
Edition:   New edition
Dimensions:   Width: 14.00cm , Height: 3.00cm , Length: 21.10cm
Weight:   0.553kg
ISBN:  

9780393309171


ISBN 10:   0393309177
Pages:   436
Publication Date:   21 April 1993
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Out of print, replaced by POD   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufatured on demand supplier.

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Reviews

A brief cultural history, written by a mainstream liberal, that describes radicalism, home-grown style, over the last hundred years. Expanding his The American Left in the Twentieth Century (1973), Diggins (History/CUNY Graduate Center; The Proud Decades, 1988, etc.) focuses on the resemblances and differences among four movements that have characterized the American left: the Lyrical Left, centered around Greenwich Village in the WW I era; the Old Left of the Depression; the New Left of the Sixties; and the latter's strange afterlife as the Academic Left of today. Although the first three movements were marked by generational discontinuities from those preceding or following them, each erupted in a fury of radical innocence and wounded idealism so peculiar to American intellectual history. Ironically, Diggins points out, now that it has succeeded in entrenching itself into the universities it once scorned, the Academic Left has become enamored of such approaches as deconstructionism - leaving it impotent, he believes, in the one area from which it traditionally gained strength: knowledge. As a result, it is left with no political significance but considerable educational significance, no power to affect immediate events but considerable authority to shape the minds of the young. It is no accident that this discussion lacks the liveliness of Diggins's earlier ones, which rely heavily on seminal histories of American Communism and the New Left written by Theodore Draper, Daniel Aaron, Todd Gitlin, and James Miller. There, on more comfortable ground, Diggins indulges his gift for pungent, pithy description (e.g., Michael Harrington, whose The Other America sparked the War on Poverty, was a Catholic with a bad conscience and a good heart ), while sketching vivid profiles of Eugene V. Debs, John Reed, Sidney Hook, C. Wright Mills, Herbert Marcuse, and the philosopher who inspired all four movements, John Dewey. A concise analysis of what has animated the American radical impulse. (Kirkus Reviews)


Author Information

John Patrick Diggins is the author of The Rise and Fall of the American Left and The Proud Decades: 1941–1960, in addition to biographies of John Adams and Max Weber. He is a distinguished professor of history at the City University of New York Graduate Center. He lives in New York City.

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