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Massimo Teodori, ed. The New Left: A Documentary History.

Biblioteca / 1960-1969

Massimo Teodori, editor. The New Left: A Documentary History. 

Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill, 1969.

xiv, 501 páginas.

Esta obra presenta tanto un estudio histórico y crítico de «el Movimiento» como una antología de los escritos del propio Movimiento.

En su introducción interpretativa, Teodori traza el crecimiento y desarrollo de la Nueva Izquierda y contrasta su carácter con el de la Vieja Izquierda. Muestra cómo las actividades estudiantiles individuales -derechos civiles en el Sur, el movimiento pacifista en el Norte, la organización comunitaria y los inicios de la revuelta universitaria- empezaron a converger en un Movimiento. A continuación, Teodori describe la radicalización de la Nueva Izquierda, uno de los resultados del movimiento de masas contra la guerra de Vietnam, cuando las manifestaciones masivas desembocaron en actos individuales y colectivos de resistencia y cuando los negros organizaron un movimiento independiente dentro del concepto de Poder Negro. La indignación moral subyacente al Movimiento seguía existiendo, pero ahora adquiría un significado político.

Por último, Teodori especula sobre el futuro de la Nueva Izquierda, sobre la revolución social y cultural que se está produciendo más allá del nuevo estilo en política hacia nuevos estilos de vida.

Los documentos aquí incluidos no sólo complementan el análisis del libro, sino que ilustran vívidamente la evolución y la gran variedad de pensamiento dentro de la Nueva Izquierda. Entre los temas tratados se encuentran el movimiento por los derechos civiles, el movimiento por la paz y el pacifismo, la libertad de expresión, la política interior y exterior estadounidense, la democracia participativa, el Black Power, la resistencia al reclutamiento, el poder estudiantil, la violencia, la no violencia y la autodefensa, las drogas, la Nueva Política, los medios de comunicación clandestinos, y las estructuras sociales alternativas.

Contents

First Part

Massimo Teodori: Historical and Critical Notes

1 – The Beginning of the Movement

2 – The Emergence of the New Left

3 – The Radicalization of the Movement

4 – Beyond Politics—Social Revolution?

Second Part

Documents

I – The Beginning of the Movement

1 – Civil Rights

Anne Braden: The Southern Freedom Movement, The Student Revolt: 1960-61

SNCC: Founding Statement

John Lewis: A Serious Revolution

Staughton Lynd: The Freedom Schools: Concept and Organization

Some Letters from Mississippi

Mike Miller: The Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party

Norm Fruchter: Mississippi: Notes on SNCC

Charles Cobb: Atlanta: The Bond Campaign

2 – Peace, Protest and Civil Liberties

Frederick Moore: Statement about ROTC

SLATE Peace Committee: Statement

Dale L. Johnson: On the Ideology of the Campus Revolution

Student Peace Union: Documents

3 – Community Organization

Carl Wittman: Students and Economic Action

Tom Hayden and Carl Wittman: Summer Report, Newark Community Union

Todd Gitlin: The Radical Potential of the Poor

4 – «Free Speech»

Bradley Cleveland: A Letter to Undergraduates

Sol Stern: A Deeper Disenchantment

Mario Savio: An End to History

II – The Emergence of a New Left Position

5 – Analyses and Proposals for American Society

SDS: Port Huron Statement

SDS: America and New Era

Carl Oglesby: Trapped in a System

Todd Gitlin: Power and the Myth of Progress

Richard Flacks: Is the Great Society Just a Barbecue?

6 – The Politics of the Movement: Coalition, Autonomy and Organizational Structures

Staughton Lynd: Coalition Politics or Nonviolent Revolution?

Tom Hayden: The Politics of the Movement

Editors of Studies on the Left: Up from Irrelevance

7 – New Left Methodology: Nonexclusionism, Participatory Democracy and Direct Action

Alan Haber: Nonexclusionism: The New Left and the Democratic Left

Staughton Lynd: The New Radicals and «Participatory Democracy»

David Dellinger: The Future of Nonviolence

III – The Radicalization of the Movement

8 – Antiwar Protest

James Gilbert: The Teach-in: Protest or Co-optation?

Paul Potter: The Incredible War

Vietnam Day Committee: Attention All Military Personnel

SNCC: Statement on Vietnam War

A.J. Muste: The Movement to Stop the War in Vietnam

Steve Weissman and John Gerassi: The Vietnamization of Latin America

9 – Black Power

SNCC: The Basis of Black Power

Stokely Carmiehael: A Declaration of War

Black Panther Party: Platform and Program

Eldridge Cleaver: An Interview

Huey P. Newton: An Interview

10 – Antidraft Resistance

«We Won’t Go» Statement

Resistance: We Refuse to Serve

Michael Ferber: A Time to Say No

The Movement: We’ve Got to Reach Our Own People

Staughton Lynd: Resistance: From Mood to Strategy

A Message to GIs and to the Movement

11 – Student Power

Mark Kleiman: High School Reform: Toward a Student Movement

Carl Davidson: The New Radicals and the Multiversity

NACLA: Who Rules Columbia?

Tom Hayden: Two, Three, Many Columbias

IV – Problems and Perspectives

12 – New Morality

Raymond Mungo: The Road to Liberation

Confessions of a Middle-Aged Pot Smoker

Naomi Jaffe and Bernardine Dohrn: The Look Is You

Free Church of Berkeley: Liberation Litanies

13 – Cultural Revolt

Berkeley Barb: From the Haight

Yippie!

Gary Snyder: Buddhism and the Coming Revolution

Diane Di Prima: Revolutionary Letters

International Werewolf Conspiracy: A Little Treatise on Dying—Fight Foul, Life Is Real

Allen Ginsberg: How To Make a March/Spectacle

Keith Lampe: From Dissent to Parody

14 – New Society

The Digger Papers: The Post-Competitive, Comparative Game of a Free City

Marvin Garson: The Movement: It’s Theory Time

15 – Alternative Structures

Raymond Mungo: The Movement and Its Media

Some Newsreel Documents

Radio Free People

Meta Information Applications: Technology in a Radical Context

Ronnie G. Davis: Guerrilla Theater: A Way of Life

The Children’s Community

The Radical Education Project: An Introduction and an Invitation

Bob Gottlieb and Marge Piercy: Movement for a Democratic Society, Beginning to Begin to Begin

16 – In Search of a Class Analysis

Gregory Calvert: In White America: Radical Consciousness and Social Change

John and Margaret Rowntree: Youth as a Class

Dave Gilbert, Bob Gottlieb and Susan Sutheim: Consumption: Domestic Imperialism

17 – New Politics

Robert Scheer: Scheer Speaks for Himself

Peace and Freedom Movement: Program

Julian Bond: The Future of the Democratic Party

Carl Oglesby: An Open Letter to McCarty Supporters

18 – What Is to Be Done

William Domhoff: How to Commit Revolution

John and Barbara Ehrenreich: From Resistance to Revolution

Guardian: The Forces Exist To Make a Beginning

Herbert Marcuse: On the New Left

Third Part

Chronology, Glossary, and Bibliography

I – Chronology of Events

II – Organizations

1 – National Organizations of the Movement

2 – Other National Organizations of Interest to the Left

3 – Organizations with a Special Area of Interest, Temporary Movements and Ad Hoc Committees

4 – Organizations for New Politics

5 – Traditional Left

III – Press

1 – Nationally Circulated Publications Related to the New Left

2 – Movement Publications

3 – Underground Press

4 – Nationally Distributed Periodicals of Interest to the Left

5 – Political Magazines of Interest to the Left

6 – Movement Periodicals or Bulletins Dedicated Mainly to One Sector of Activity

7 – Periodicals of Traditional Left Organizations

Selected Bibliography