Paul Gottfried

A New History of the American Left

Posted by Paul Gottfried on June 05, 2008

Daniel J. Flynn has written a book for Crown Press, A Conservative History of the American Left, which is intended to be a “conservative” interpretation of the Left in our country. Although Dan could have presented his study of the American Left and its nineteenth-century models without identifying himself or his work politically, he may have appended “conservative” in order to capture a “movement conservative” market. Despite this awkward packaging, Dan has given us the fruits of true research; and while he has approached his subject as a journalist with partisan inclinations, his book is full of scholarly perceptions.

One particularly illuminating aspect of his work is the attempt to uncover old leftist ideas in their most recent incarnations. Flynn’s investigation yields multiple results, especially in the cases of the New Left and hippie communes of the 1960s, whose creators and devotees made no secret of their borrowings from older leftist and communitarian movements. By the time these self-styled social radicals and radical communitarians came on the scene, Flynn demonstrates, there was already a century of indigenous American revolutionary and back-to-nature causes on which they could build their own plans for revolutionary change.

One of the most fruitful areas of study in this book are the American Abolitionists, a group that Flynn looks at partly through the extensive scholarship of a former editorial colleague of mine, Aileen S. Kraditor, who wrote amply on the women suffragists and the Abolitionists. Both groups pursued goals that in our far more leftist age would seem modest and even self-evidently moral. But what these activists usually desired and what their rhetoric intimated pointed beyond their bourgeois Protestant age, to our own socially disintegrated modernity.

The most critical insight that I extracted from Flynn’s book is the recognition that radical social ideas travel well in American society, if they are made to look and smell American. Flynn notes the sedulous care with which the American Communist Party made itself over into a super-patriotic organization, as soon as the Soviets and Americans found themselves on the same side against “fascism” in World War Two. Moreover, the anti-Americanism that the neoconservatives identify with the “antiwar Left” has been present only intermittently on the American Left. The “hate-America” attitude that was once associated with radical social reformers may have been peculiar to the student protests of the Vietnam War-era. One can easily find appeals to the “American tradition” on the American Left as well as elsewhere on the political spectrum.  Although I wish Dan had consulted my book The Strange Death of Marxism, a work that makes much the same point, he does manage to bring in enough of his own documentation to prove the compatibility between sounding “pro-American” and favoring radical and even revolutionary leftist projects.

Book Cover

Flynn also relates this tendency to the association of the “American tradition” with the advocacy of what are seen as “democratic” and “egalitarian” reforms. Although it may be an exaggeration that Martin Luther King’s “message was quite conservative even if the messenger was not,” it is undoubtedly true that “King’s biblically laced rhetoric would have meshed seamlessly with the fabric of the larger Left,” “had he emerged in the 1850s instead of the 1950s.” Flynn is also right that “underlying the swerves and ironies that mark her [Hillary Clinton’s] journey is a religious grounding that informs and inspires her politics.” Her “mission to provide health care to every American, to make child-rearing a collective rather than familial obligation, to redistribute wealth, to ban cigarettes, to elevate ‘public sector’ work to the status of military service is a religious crusade.” Hillary’s language and fury “hearken back to the zealotry and moral indignation of the abolitionists, the do-gooder spirit of the Social Gospel, and the paternalism of the progressives.” In her moral earnestness, though certainly not in her post-Christian theology, Hillary is an unmistakable American Methodist. She is Carry A. Nation and other nineteenth-century prohibitionists in modern designer’s clothing and freed of any concern with traditional Protestant doctrines.

One shortcoming in Dan’s otherwise comprehensive study of the pedigree of the American Left is any recognition of how seamlessly the neoconservatives fit into the subject of his book. If there is any group in the world that both consciously and unconsciously represents American leftist thinking, it is the editors of the Weekly Standard and the Wall Street Journal. From McCain’s blah-blah about the need for a League of Democracies to the unending appeals to Lincoln the Emancipator, Wilson the German-slayer and global democrat, and the Christ-like antiracist Martin Luther King, neoconservatives have mined unceasingly the radical democratic and world missionary strains in the American national character. In fact it is hard to think of any group in American history, with the possible exception of the Abolitionists, that more fully embodies tendencies that Dan investigates. It is of course possible to read his book without noticing this fit, but his argument takes on new credibility if one looks at the neoconservatives as a striking example of his theme. 


Comments

Thanks, Paul, for your informative review of Daniel Flynn’s new book. I had seen it and
wondered about it. You’ve given me the enticement to acquire and read it.

Dan has effectively demonstrated that there are bridges between the historic American
Left and the culture of American patriotism. In fact his work documents this connection
better than any other study I have looked at. My book The Strange Death of Marxism,
which Dan tells me is the part of my trilogy he had not read, mostly assumes the
connection without proving it. The fact that Dan consulted the work of my friend Aileen
Kraditor, who makes the same assumptions, is telling.

Paul’s review has encouraged me to read Flynn’s book.  If it is correct that King’s rhetoric would have placed him in good company with Garrison and Frederick Douglas in the mid-19th century, then it cannot be true that 20th c. American leftism is an ideology imported from elsewhere (as some rightists like to believe).  The leftist ‘rights revolution’ has deep roots in American soil.

This sounds like a nust-read.  I gather that it’s an American elaboration of the idea that British Labour Party socialism owed far more to Methodism than to Marx.

Dr. Havers, Don’t put too much stock in “rhetoric”.
And it’s difficult to imagine that the leftists who found a home in the New Deal, to name a more striking example, had “deep roots in American soil.” Or were they really rightists?

To Acurmudgeon:
That’s a good point. One shouldn’t draw a straight line between the 1850s and MLK (just as some paleos shouldn’t draw a line between Lincoln & GWB’s democracy-bldg).  That said, there have always been attempts in the republic to “immanentize the eschaton,” and not just at the rhetorical level.

I do so hate to pick nits.

Carrie Nation, not Carry.

While I am aware of the crushing burden of fact checking, it seems as if a spate of minor linguistic errors continues to crop up, silly mis-spellings and the like.

I can “read past them” of course, but it doesn’t set quite the proper tone.

Nice article, otherwise.

There is much in movements we call leftist that not only goes back to American roots, but that even looks a bit proto-paleocon.  On the other hand one sees a good bit of America bashing on what we call the right, the idea that Americans are decadent, lazy, shiftless, hedonistic, and need a good war to bring them back into line.

I found Flynn’s book to be very informative, although I disagreed with his assessment of Dorothy Day as a Leftist.  Allan Carlson probably also would take exception to the maternalism of Jane Addams being termed Leftist as well as he wrote approvingly of her in “The American Way”.  Otherwise the book was well-researched, well-written, and highly entertaining.

nice review, i might have to check it out.

I dont understand todays conservatives. This subjective truth, this labeling, this broad brush painting of large groups of people into small compartmentalised groups, needs to stop.

Humans just arent wired that way, and its physically impossible that these people are like an ant hill. Its not true of the republicans ideology and its not true of the democratic one.

The guy wrote a book on the conservative view of the American left, its an opinion piece and not ‘truth’ and I fail to see how a scholarly view makes an opinion not an opinion.

Posted by Jet on Jun 10, 2008.

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As I recall Jesus and hid group had few possessions and shared what they had. Isnt that communal?  Werent the pilgrims that came to America communal?

Why is it that todays Christians have embraced capitalism? Which is materialism, didnt Jesus preach that materialism was Mammonism?

Are you saying Jesus was a communal, peace loving hippy?

Posted by Jet on Jun 10, 2008.

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