The Rise and Fall of Leftist Radicalism in America
By (Author) Edward Walter
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th November 1992
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Political ideologies and movements
320.530973
Hardback
200
Walter analyzes the history of American radicals of the left (socialists, communists, and radical liberals) from their emergence as an opinion-shaping force during the Great Depression to the present, and concludes that theirs is a fundamentally negative view of American social and political history. Walter argues that radical leftists have blunted reasonable political policy and prevented the achievement of desirable social goals, and that their dissidence combines a naive faith in revolutionary leaders, an unrealistic hope for perfect social justice, and an implacable hatred of free enterprise. According to Walter, radical leftists, despite often noble intentions, have been a destructive force in American history. The Rise and Fall of Leftist Radicalism in America attempts to understand left-wing radicalism by viewing the movement as a whole, as it reacted to the central national and international events of the last sixty years. In particular, Walter discusses labor agitation in the 1930s and 1940s; radical leftist support of the Soviet Union, Cuba, and China; McCarthyism; opposition to the war in Vietnam; and today's pre-eminent radical cause, environmentalism. This volume is recommended for political scientists, historians, and political philosophers.
It is a carefully written and documented study (excellent bibliography and ample chapter endnotes). Comprehensive index. General readers; undergraduate through faculty audiences.-Choice
"It is a carefully written and documented study (excellent bibliography and ample chapter endnotes). Comprehensive index. General readers; undergraduate through faculty audiences."-Choice
EDWARD WALTER is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Missouri. He specializes in social and political philosophy, ethics, philosophy of economics, and public policy studies. Walter is the author of The Immorality of Limiting Growth.