
Irving Howe
et al.
Published online:
22 January 2015
Published in print:
28 October 2014
Online ISBN:
9780300210583
Print ISBN:
9780300203660
Contents
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Some Background Conditions Some Background Conditions
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Ideologues and Desperadoes Ideologues and Desperadoes
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A. Ideologues, White. A. Ideologues, White.
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B. Ideologues, Negro. B. Ideologues, Negro.
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C. Desperadoes, White. C. Desperadoes, White.
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D. Desperadoes, Negro. D. Desperadoes, Negro.
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The “New Leftist”—A Sketch The “New Leftist”—A Sketch
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A. Cultural Style. A. Cultural Style.
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B. Domestic Politics. B. Domestic Politics.
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C. Politics and Freedom. C. Politics and Freedom.
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Cite
Howe, Irving (ed.), 'New Styles in “Leftism” {1965}', in Nina Howe (ed.), A Voice Still Heard: Selected Essays of Irving Howe (New Haven, CT , 2014; online edn, Yale Scholarship Online, 22 Jan. 2015), https://doi.org/10.12987/yale/9780300203660.003.0006, accessed 28 Apr. 2025.
Abstract
This chapter presents Irving Howe's 1965 political essay “New Styles in Leftism,” in which he launches an assault on “new leftism” and its unmitigated radicalism. He first describes the background conditions that seem to promote radicalism among America's youth before turning to the disintegration of American radicalism and its impact on many ideologues such as Stalinism, Marxism-Leninism, and black nationalism. Howe then examines the emergence of a new kind of young militants, both whites and Negroes, on campus and in the civil rights movement. He ends his essay by sketching a portrait of the new leftists and their involvement in American politics.
Keywords:
new leftism, Irving Howe, radicalism, youth, ideologues, militants, whites, Negroes, civil rights movement, politics
Subject
Literary Studies (American)
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