ABSTRACT

Ideas for the Ice Age is a companion volume to Max Lerner's classic work Ideas Are Weapons. Both were written mostly in the 1930s, as products of a period when the democratic idea was under heavy siege from totalitarian ideologies of the right and left., In its focus, Ideas for the Ice Age is a study of the task of democracy in a revolutionary era, an enterprise that has taken on new urgency in the post-Communist world. For Lerner this task comprises four aspects around which the book is organized: the task of winning the future for American democracy, and planning its organization; the problem of selecting out those elements of a usable past which, when strengthened and extended, can assure a livable future; the problem of acting decisively in moments of international crisis; and the problem of strengthening democracy at home and completing its unfinished business., Within this framework, Lerner selects ideas and personalities that have decisively shaped the modern mind. The selections have lost none of their original timeliness. Among the wide range of figures considered here are Machiavelli, Franz Kafka, Randolph Bourne, Harold Laski, John Strachey. and Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes. Lerner reflects as well on the offices, institutions, and constitutional questions of American democracy in moments of historical crisis. For a new generation of readers, this gallery of thinkers will be essential reading, a must for students of American studies, the history of ideas, and political theory.

part One|79 pages

Who Owns the Future?

chapter 1|24 pages

The War as Revolution

chapter 2|7 pages

Letter on Democracy1

chapter 4|7 pages

Economic Empire and Monopoly State

chapter 5|5 pages

The People’s Century

chapter 6|22 pages

If We Own the Future

part Two|71 pages

The Voyage of the Mind

chapter 1|17 pages

Machiavelli and Machiavellism1

chapter 2|16 pages

The Mind and Faith of Justice Holmes

chapter 3|27 pages

Randolph Bourne and Two Generations1

chapter 4|9 pages

Franz Kafka and the Human Voyage

part Three|44 pages

America’s Hour of Decision

chapter 1|13 pages

In the Time of the Great Debate

chapter 2|16 pages

Notes on the March of Fascism

chapter 3|7 pages

Propaganda in Our Time

chapter 4|6 pages

Democracy for a War Generation1

part Four|221 pages

The Unfinished Business of Democracy

chapter 2|33 pages

Constitution and Court as Symbols1

chapter 3|40 pages

Notes on the Supreme Court Crisis1

chapter 5|8 pages

Legalism and Legality

chapter 6|12 pages

Aspects of Economic Strategy

chapter 7|9 pages

The Administrative Revolution in America

chapter 8|26 pages

Notes on the Two-Front War

chapter 9|10 pages

State, Class, and Party

chapter 10|6 pages

The Presidential Office

chapter 11|15 pages

Two Presidents in Wartime

chapter 12|5 pages

Reflections on a Harsh Age

chapter 13|6 pages

The Left: End and Beginning