GreatWritersFranzKafka

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Monday, 23 July 2012

The Neoconservatives by Prof. Patrick N. Allitt - Goodrich C. White Professor of History, Emory University (TTC Lecture)

Posted on 01:35 by Unknown
Lecture Twenty-Seven The Neoconservatives

Scope: Among the earliest and sharpest critics of the new conservatives in the 1950s had been a group of liberal social scientists centered at Berkeley, Harvard, and Columbia, including Daniel Bell, Nathan Glazer, Samuel Huntington, and Daniel Patrick Moynihan. In the 1960s, however, many of them, reacting to the decade's social turbulence, began to raise doubts about the governability of their society and about the need for less far-reaching government programs. In 1965, Bell launched a new journal, The Public Interest, with Irving Kristol, dedicated to such practical policy questions as urban renewal, law and order, education, and racial politics. Before long, they and their contributors noticed a strong moral element in their ostensibly neutral analysis and admitted that they were implicitly arguing for traditional virtues. Although many of them had grown up on the political left, they gradually became known as the "neoconservatives" and, for the most part, accepted the label. Less tradition-oriented than most of the National Review group, and more confident that government programs can sometimes be benign, they nevertheless found themselves converging with their former antagonists, often to their own astonishment.

Outline

I. Daniel Bell's anthology, The New American Right (1955), was the most concentrated attack on the new conservatives in the 1950s.
A. It used social-psychological models to explain their conduct, rather than engaging in an analysis of ideas.
B. At its worst, it insinuated a continuity between European fascism and American conservatism.
C. This generation of sociologists was influenced by Theodor Adorno's The Authoritarian Personality.
D. Richard Hofstadter described the conservatives' approach to politics as part of the "paranoid style" and dismissed them as "pseudo-conservatives." E. William Buckley and Russell Kirk answered, in reviews, that if anyone needed psychological treatment, it was the liberal intellectuals.

II. Liberal social scientists were unnerved by the social upheavals of the 1960s and began to fear that America was becoming ungovernable.
A. Proud of their resistance to McCarthyism, they were not accustomed to being attacked from the left.
B. The new left regarded liberal intellectuals as supporters of the military-industrial complex.
C. As senior academics, they often suffered the brunt of student criticism in the campus uprisings.
D. Samuel Huntington speculated about the destabilizing character of too much political involvement, in direct contradiction of the idea that all citizens should take an interest in politics.

III. Daniel Bell and Irving Kristol launched The Public Interest in 1965 as an ostensibly nonideological policy journal.
A. Its contributors emphasized accurate, statistically informed studies of urban and social problems and offered practical solutions.
1. Many of the contributors were members of the New York intellectual family, mostly secular Jews.
2. Kristol himself was a former Trotskyist, long accustomed to arguing against Stalinists. B. Daniel Patrick Moynihan and Nathan Glazer had shown, in Beyond the Melting Pot (1963), that ethnic groups do not disappear in America. This discovery had implications for American racial policy after the civil rights movement.
C. Moynihan's report on African American families (1965) caused a furor and contributed to Moynihan's alienation from mainstream liberalism.
D. Glazer and other contributors began to criticize affirmative action.
1. It was based on a false idea about what society is actually like.
2. It cast doubt on minorities' achievements and provoked a white backlash.
E. Edward Banfield's The Unheavenly City (1970) won widespread praise from conservatives for its harsh summary of inner-city problems.
1. Banfield singled out the "preconventional morality" of the urban underclass.
2. The riots, he argued, were for "fun and profit" and were not political rebellions. F. Norman Podhoretz brought Commentary into the neoconservative orbit. In 1970, it began to attack feminism, black radicalism, and the McGovern movement in the Democratic Party.

IV. Among the neoconservatives' most distinctive ideas were the concept of the new class, the law of unintended consequences, and the theory of mediating structures.
A. The new class, according to their theory, thrives in bureaucracy and is sentimentally attached to the adversary culture rather than to the values of the bourgeois middle class.
B. The law of unintended consequences codified the idea that the most ambitious government programs will have the most unexpected consequences, many of them malignant.
C. Peter Berger, Richard Neuhaus, Michael Novak, and others developed the idea of mediating structures that stand between the individual and the state, generating healthy individuals and a healthy society. These include family, church and synagogue, and voluntary organizations.
D. In the late 1970s, neoconservatives also began to write with greater appreciation about capitalism. Suggested Reading: Banfield, The Unheavenly City. Dorrien, The Neoconservative Mind. Kristol, Two Cheers for Capitalism. Steinfels, The Neoconservatives.

Questions to Consider:

1. What events and conditions led this group of ex-radical liberals to change their political identities in the 1960s and 1970s?
2. Why was the controversy surrounding the Moynihan report so intense?

http://history.emory.edu/home/people/faculty/allitt.html
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Posted in | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • "A tiger - in Africa?" - Monty Python's The Meaning of Life (1983): The First Zulu War. Natal 1879 (not Glasgow)
    Democracy and humanitarianism have always been tarde marks of the British Army and have stamped its triumph throughout history, in the furth...
  • California Through the Lens of Hollywood by Dana Polan
    From the cartoons that I watched on television in my East Coast childhood, I remember what was for me a primary image of California. Several...
  • Most Evil Women in History: Satan's Daughter Elisabeth Förster-Nietzsche
    Elisabeth Förster-Nietzsche, (born July 10, 1846, Röcken, near Lützen, Prussia [Germany]—died Nov. 8, 1935, Weimar, Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach [G...
  • The Two versions of the Imaginary - Maurice Blanchot, The Space of Literature
    But what is the image? When there is nothing, the image finds in this nothing its necessary condition, but there it disappears. The image ne...
  • Poesia e Composição - A Inspiração e o Trabalho de Arte, João Cabral de Melo Neto (Versão Integral)
    (Conferência pronunciada na Biblioteca de São Paulo, em 13.11.52,no curso de Poética) A composição que para uns é o alto de aprisionar a poe...
  • The Mother of All Bubbles - Gordon Gekko - Wall Street: Money never sleeps
    You wanna know what the mother of all bubbles was? Us. The human race. Scientists call it the Cambrian Explosion, from the Cambrian fauna.It...
  • The God’s Script by Jorge Luis Borges
    The prison is deep and of stone; its form, that of a nearly perfect hemisphere, though the floor (also of stone) is somewhat less than a gre...
  • Alien and the Monstrous-Feminine by Barbara Creed
    The science fiction horror film Alien (1979) is a complex representation of the monstrous-feminine in terms of the maternal figure as perce...
  • The Genius of Josef Lada
    The hugely popular illustrator, cartoonist, painter, and novelist, as well as a successful caricaturist and stage designer, Josef Lada was b...
  • Hegelianism For Dummies
    No doubt we are intelligent. But far from changing the face of the world, on stage we keep producing rabbits from our brain, and snow-white ...

Blog Archive

  • ►  2013 (133)
    • ►  August (6)
    • ►  July (11)
    • ►  June (22)
    • ►  May (23)
    • ►  April (21)
    • ►  March (17)
    • ►  February (19)
    • ►  January (14)
  • ▼  2012 (269)
    • ►  December (20)
    • ►  November (15)
    • ►  October (12)
    • ►  September (7)
    • ►  August (22)
    • ▼  July (21)
      • Slavoj Zizek - The Reality of the Virtual
      • Die Welt ist eben die Hoelle - Arthur Schopenhauer
      • Nichts ist wirklich sicher Der Philosoph Karl Popp...
      • GenNietzsche Interview mit einem Philosophen
      • Es war 1924 - Der Weg zur Kritischen Theorie Das ...
      • Die Wahrheit der Worte - Ludwig Wittgensteins Phil...
      • Mystik und Hoffnung - Ernst Bloch
      • Adorno - Der Bürger als Revolutionär (1) Wer denkt...
      • Einladung zum Diskurs - Jürgen Habermas in Stanford
      • Football and Fascism - Comunism and Football (BBC ...
      • Trinity: A Graphic History of the First Atomic Bom...
      • The Music of the Big Bang
      • Adolf Hitler visits the exhibition of "degenerated...
      • Zehn Jahre Techno: Von Kraftwerk zur Love Parade u...
      • The Neoconservatives by Prof. Patrick N. Allitt - ...
      • The Commercial Aesthetic of Titanic by Richard Mal...
      • Hollywood and World History by George MacDonald Fr...
      • Science and Society and Self-Organization of Astro...
      • Dark Energy Fundamentalism: Prof. Simon White expl...
      • Fichtean Surfers - Pure Acting - Reine Tathandlung...
      • Omar Khayyam: The universe is a fata morgana; life...
    • ►  June (27)
    • ►  May (27)
    • ►  April (22)
    • ►  March (24)
    • ►  February (31)
    • ►  January (41)
  • ►  2011 (98)
    • ►  December (26)
    • ►  November (55)
    • ►  October (17)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile