American Decades
Radical Politics: The New Left
One of the most striking and controversial political phenomena of the 1960s was the rise and decline of the New Left. It arose from the civil rights movement in 1960, played a central role in the Vietnam War protest movement, and then at the height of its influence it self-destructed. By late 1970 the New Left was essentially nonexistent.
Roots in the Civil Rights Movement.
The New Left was born with Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) at the University of Michigan in 1960. Though SDS was never a single-issue organization, many of its early members saw SDS as a means of organizing northern university students to participate in the black-voter-registration drives that the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) started in the South in 1961.
C. Wright Mills, Godfather to the New Left.
Much of the impetus for the direction SDS took in its early years came from the writings of sociologist C. Wright...
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1960's Government and Politics
- Overview
-
Topics in the News
- Assassination and Violent Protest
- The Cold War Continued: Crisis Years, 1960-1965
- The Cold War Continued: The Cuban Missile Crisis
- The Cold War Continued: Nuclear Arms Race, Arms Control, and Détente
- The Cold War Continued: The Vietnam War
- Domestic Policy: Government, Civil Rights, and Race Relations
- Domestic Policy: Government and the Economy
- Domestic Policy: The Great Society
- National Politics: 1960 Elections
- National Politics: 1962 Elections
- National Politics: 1964 Elections
- National Politics: 1966 Elections
- National Politics: 1968 Elections
- Radical Politics: Black Power
- Radical Politics: The Far Right
- Radical Politics: The New Left
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Government and Politics, 1960–1969
