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Battle for the Conservative Flag


Article # : 14588 

Section : BOOK WORLD
Issue Date : 5 / 1988  3,029 Words
Author : Larry D. Nachman
Larry D. Nachman is professor of political science at the College of Staten Island, CUNY, and is a frequent contributor to Commentary and Salmagundi. He is completing a book on psychoanalysis and social theory.

       THE CONSERVATIVE MOVEMENT
       Paul Gottfried and Thomas Fleming
       Boston: Twayne, 1988
       152 pp., $ 18.95
       
        The Conservative Movement is an attempt to survey, in a short book, the thought and political goals of American conservatives since the end of the Second World War. The authors, conservatives themselves, are particularly interested in examining the effects on conservatism, its coherence as a political theory, and its prospects as a political movement, of the swelling of its ranks in the last two decades by two groups who differ greatly from each other and from those who previously constituted conservatism: the neoconservatives and the largely Evangelical Protestants of the New Right.
       
        The Conservative Movement reflects in both tone and substance something of the character of its subject matter. Conservatives have frequently claimed that their position reflects the real position of a majority of Americans. In the decade before the Goldwater debacle, conservatives argued that the reason a large number of Americans did not vote in elections was that the two major parties did not present them with viable alternatives. They were being asked to choose between two versions of the reigning liberalism. The slogan for the Goldwater campaign was "A choice, not an echo." It was a way for conservatives to deal with the uncomfortable fact that, in the great democratic republic, a majority of Americans persistently voted for liberal policies and liberal candidates. This theme was repeated in the later phrases, "silent majority" and "moral majority." These appeals to a hidden, rejected majority demonstrate an ... (1998 of 19027 Characters)
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