Infantile Disorder?

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A01=Nigel Young
American NL
antiwar protest analysis
Author_Nigel Young
Black Movement
Category=JPFF
Category=NHTB
CND Leadership
CND March
Direct Democracy
Draft Resistance Movement
Early NL
English NL
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
extra-parliamentary strategy
HUAC
identity politics research
identity-crisis
infantile disorder
Labor History
Labor Movement
Labor Party
Liberation Wars
Lowndes County Freedom Organization
Lunatic Fringe
NL Radical
NLR
Nuclear Disarmament
Nuclear Disarmament Movement
political radicalism
Political Theory
postwar British American left movements
SDS Activist
SDS Leadership
SNCC Leader
SNCC Member
social movements theory
Socialism
student activism history
student movements
Urban Guerilla
Vietnam Issue
Vietnam war
VSC
White America
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138334632
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 23 Nov 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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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.

Nigel Young, now mainly based in Yorkshire, Northern England, has been active in transnational peace activity for at least a half century. He is presently Editor-in-Chief of the 'Oxford International Encyclopedia of World Peace' (a four-volume reference work) for which he won the Dayton Literary Peace Prize. He is also active in the Balkans Peace Park Project, UK (B3P).

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