ABSTRACT

First published in 1977. The New Left, as an organised political phenomenon, came – and went – largely in the 1960s. Was the Movement that went into precipitate decline after 1969 the same New Left that had developed a decade earlier? Nigel Young’s thesis is that the core New Left, as it had evolved by the mid-1960s, had a unique identity that set it apart from other Old Left and Marxist groups. He believes that this was dissipated in the later developments of the black and student movements, and in the opposition to the Vietnam war. By 1968 – the watershed year – an acute ‘identity-crisis’ had set in within the Movement and became the major source of the New Left’s disintegration.

Nigel Young traces the Movement’s growth and crisis mainly in Britain and America, where it reached its greater strength, but attention is also paid to parallel developments in similar movements elsewhere. He analyses the crisis in terms of the interrelationship between dilemmas of strategy and ideas, and the external events which tend to reinforce the tendencies toward elitism, intolerance and violence, and produce organisational breakdown.

chapter |7 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|16 pages

Convergence and Breakthrough

chapter 2|27 pages

The New Left: A Core Identity

chapter 3|15 pages

A New Radicalism

chapter 5|15 pages

The Problem of Agency

chapter 6|16 pages

Black Movements in Crisis

chapter 7|14 pages

In Search of Ideology

chapter 8|19 pages

The New Left in Britain: 1956–70

chapter 9|26 pages

Vietnam and Alignment

chapter 10|16 pages

SDS in Flux

chapter 11|18 pages

Annus Mirabilis: 1968

chapter 12|31 pages

Turn Towards Violence

chapter 13|29 pages

Revolution and the New Left

chapter 14|15 pages

Provocation: Response and Repression

chapter 15|26 pages

The New Left and the Old

chapter 16|36 pages

A Crisis of Identity

chapter 17|25 pages

Picking up the Threads