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- <text id=93TT1851>
- <title>
- June 07, 1993: Living Out the Wars of 1968
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Jun. 07, 1993 The Incredible Shrinking President
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ESSAY, Page 74
- Living Out the Wars of 1968
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Barbara Ehrenreich
- </p>
- <p> It was the best of times or, depending on your political and
- philosophical outlook, one of the foulest and most depraved.
- Rebellion seemed to be leaping from city to city, continent
- to continent, by some fiery process of contagion. Vietnam unleashed
- the Tet offensive; France shook with the revolutionary "events
- of May"; radical students filled the streets of Mexico City,
- Berlin, Tokyo, Beijing, Prague. In the U.S., Chicago swirled
- into near anarchy as cops battled antiwar demonstrators gathered
- at the Democratic Convention. And everywhere from Amsterdam
- to Haight-Ashbury, a generation was getting high, making love,
- acting up.
- </p>
- <p> So, clearly, it was the year from hell--a collective "dive
- into extensive social and personal dysfunction," as the Wall
- Street Journal editorialized recently. Or, depending again on
- your outlook, a global breakthrough for the human spirit. On
- this, the 25th anniversary of 1968, probably the only thing
- we can all agree on is that '68 marks the beginning of the "culture
- wars," which have divided America ever since.
- </p>
- <p> It wasn't only a left-right thing. '68 reconfigured all the
- categories and tore up the political maps that had worked, more
- or less, since the time of the French Revolution. Yes, the social
- movements that climaxed in '68 were a "New Left," but only in
- the sense that, say, Rosemary's Baby (1968) was just a new member
- of the family. Old leftists--communists and socialists--responded to it, more often than not, with revulsion. In France
- the Communist Party did its best to isolate the young enragees.
- In China senior party hacks shuddered before a Cultural Revolution
- whose slogan was "Attack the Party headquarters!" In communist
- East Germany the Stasi agreed with its Western counterparts
- that student leader Rudi Dutschke was a "dangerous subversive."
- </p>
- <p> For the old, pre-'68 left, the goal was socialism, meaning a
- new, more rational system of authority. The mad vagaries of
- the market would be replaced by the sober deliberations of experts;
- dedicated, responsible cadres would take over from the CEOs.
- But if there was one theme that united the New Leftists of the
- world it was a hatred of authority in any form, no matter how
- well-meaning. French radicals demanded "All power to the imagination!"
- Americans in the civil rights movement envisioned--not socialism--but a huge, messy, effervescent process of participatory
- democracy, from the bottom up. "Power to the people" was to
- be power subtracted from smug men behind desks--including,
- among others, Marxist professors.
- </p>
- <p> Grown-up leftists responded by denouncing young radicals as
- "spoiled children," anarchists, even "orangutans." Horrified
- by the student take-over of Columbia University in the spring,
- one band of intellectuals moved en masse to the political right--where they made their mark as "neoconservatives."
- </p>
- <p> But the other side of '68 was a radical remolding of the American
- right. The "old right" stood for anti-communism and economic
- conservatism and had a strong anti-authoritarian streak of its
- own, as personified, for example, by novelist-philosopher Ayn
- Rand. But in response to the anti-authoritarianism of the young
- radicals, the right suddenly restyled itself as the defender
- of authority in all its manifestations--legal, familial, religious
- and military. "Traditional values" made their first tentative
- debut in the '68 Republican campaign, when Spiro Agnew promised
- to cure social unrest with a mass spanking. It was in '68 that
- a "New Right"--toughened with the grass-roots racism of George
- Wallace, fortified intellectually by the neoconservatives--emerged to uphold the traditional icons of God, family and flag.
- </p>
- <p> Thus both sides of the "culture wars" of the '80s and '90s took
- form in the pivotal year of '68. The key issues are different
- now--abortion and gay rights, for example, as opposed to Vietnam
- and racism--but the underlying themes still echo the clashes
- of '68: Diversity vs. conformity, tradition vs. iconoclasm,
- self-expression vs. deference to norms. "Question authority,"
- in other words, vs. "Father knows best."
- </p>
- <p> The 25th anniversary of '68 is a good time to reflect, calmly
- and philosophically, on these deep, underlying choices. On one
- hand we know that anti-authoritarianism for its own sake easily
- degenerates into a rude and unfocused defiance: Revolution,
- as Abbie Hoffman put it, "for the hell of it." Certainly '68
- had its wretched excesses as well as its moments of glory: the
- personal tragedy of lives undone by drugs and sex, the heavy
- cost of riots and destruction. One might easily conclude that
- the ancient rules and hierarchies are there for a reason--they've worked, more or less, for untold millenniums, so there's
- no point in changing them now.
- </p>
- <p> But it's also true that what "worked" for thousands of years
- may not be the best way of doing things. Democracy, after all,
- was once a far-out, subversive notion, condemned by kings and
- priests. In our own country, it took all kinds of hell-raising,
- including a war, to get across the simple notion that no person
- is morally entitled to own another. One generation's hallowed
- tradition--slavery, or the divine right of kings--may be
- another generation's object lesson in human folly.
- </p>
- <p> '68 was one more awkward, stumbling, half-step forward in what
- Dutschke called the "long march" toward human freedom. It helped
- inspire the worldwide feminist movement and the resistance to
- communist authoritarianism that climaxed in the vast, peaceful
- revolutions of '89. For these reasons alone, the rebellions
- of '68 deserve at least one brief, nonpartisan cheer: Hats off
- to '68 and--depending on your personal and political preference--also shoes, shirts, ties, bras, plus blindfolds and manacles
- of any kind!
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-