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The Sixties, Alive and Well?


Article # : 14385 

Section : BOOK WORLD
Issue Date : 6 / 1988  2,732 Words
Author : Raël Jean Isaac
Raël Jean Isaac is coauthor (with Erich Isaac) of The Coercive Utopians and is the author of Israel Divided and Parties and Politics of Israel. She is presently coauthoring (with Virginia Armat) a study on the deinstitutionalization of the mentally ill.

       Conventional wisdom has it that the adversary culture of the 1960s has been swept away by the social and political changes of the 1970s and 1980s, notably the two-term Reagan presidency. In this collection of essays, almost all written since 1983, Paul Hollander, author of the now classic Political Pilgrims, says otherwise. The street demonstrations, the dramatic political gestures, the proliferation of alternative life-styles may be gone. But many of the patterns of behavior and values underlying them have been incorporated into the culture. Much of the intellectual elite--in universities, churches, the media--is propelled by what Hollander calls a "savage rejection" of Western political institutions.
       
        Even some of the chief actors are still with us, their manner subdued, their purposes unchanged. Tom Hayden has left behind the rhetoric typified by a leaflet he endorsed in 1968: "Burn your money.... Break down the family, church, nature, city, economy." He has embarked on the long road through the institutions, from his base in the California legislature. Bernadine Dorhn, once a leader of the Weather Underground, now has joined a prominent New York law firm. But on surfacing from the underground in 1980, she stated her continuing conviction that the United States was guilty of "unspeakable crimes" and there was continued need for "underground work." Staughnton Lynd, no longer an antiwar activist, as a labor lawyer seeks to move us closer to "economic democracy," that is, socialism.
       
        The term "adversary culture" was coined by Lionel Trilling in the early sixties to describe what he called the "subversive intention" of modern literature, its effort to detach the reader "from the habits of thought and feeling that the larger culture ... (1997 of 17353 Characters)
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