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  3. A New Insurgency: The Port Huron Statement and Its Times

A New Insurgency: The Port Huron Statement and Its Times

Howard Brick and Gregory Parker
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  • Overview

  • Contents

Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) was just one of several new insurgent movements for democracy and social justice during the late 1950s and early 1960s, and it must be understood in the context of other causes and organizations—in the United States and abroad—that inspired its founding manifesto, the Port Huron Statement. In A New Insurgency: The Port Huron Statement and Its Times, a diverse group of more than forty scholars and activists take a transnational approach in order to explore the different—though often interconnected—campaigns that mobilized people along varied racial, ethnic, gender, and regional dimensions from the birth of the New Left in the civil rights and pacifist agitation of the 1950s to the Occupy movements of today.
 
This volume features three never-before-published “manifesto drafts” written by Tom Hayden in early 1962 that generated the discussion leading to the Port Huron meeting. Other highlights include recollections from leading women in the Port Huron deliberations who, three years later, protested the subordination of women within the radical movements, thus setting the stage for the rise of women’s liberation. A New Insurgency is based on the University of Michigan’s conference commemorating the fiftieth anniversary of the Port Huron Statement in 2012.

“The fiftieth anniversary of the Port Huron Statement has drawn a great number of reflections and commemorations, but this carefully conceived volume offers an account of unrivaled ambition, exceptional breadth, and surprising insight. It both excavates the event itself—vividly, perceptively, exhaustively—and gives it the largest and most illuminating of contexts. A New Insurgency is as close to definitive as any volume of this kind can become.”
—Geoff Eley, Karl Pohrt Distinguished University Professor of Contemporary History, University of Michigan

  • Cover
  • Title Page
  • Copyright Page
  • Dedication
  • Acknowledgments
  • Contents
  • Introduction
  • Prologue
  • Part I. Experiences
    • 1 | A Call, Again by Alan Haber
    • 2 | Experiencing the Sixties at the Intersection of SDS and SNCC by Martha Prescod Noonan
    • 3 | Returning to Ann Arbor by Casey Hayden
    • 4 | Many Inheritances . . . One Legacy by Maria Varela
    • 5 | Reflections on SDS and the 1960s Movements for Social Justice by Dorothy Dawson Burlage
    • 6 | Reflections on Women and the Culture of Port Huron by Barbara Haber
    • 7 | The Evolution of a Radical’s Consciousness: Living an Authentic Life by Sharon Jeffrey Lehrer
    • 8 | Port Huron: Where’s the Labor Section? by Kim Moody
    • 9 | It’s Time to Change the Water in the Fish Tank by Frank Joyce
    • 10 | Democracy, Labor, and Globalization: Reflections on Port Huron by Robert J. S. Ross
  • Part II. Contexts
    • 11 | Lefts Old and New: Sixties Radicalism, Now and Then by Christopher Phelps
    • 12 | Of Little Rocks and Levittowns: The Northern Racial Landscape and the Origins of the 1960s New Left by Matthew J. Countryman
    • 13 | The Lightning Bolt That Sparked the Port Huron Statement by Aldon Morris
    • 14 | A New Left Philosophical Itinerary: Marcuse, Sartre, and Then Camus by Ronald Aronson
    • 15 | Participatory Art as Participatory Democracy: The American Avant-Garde in the 1950s and 1960s by Robert Genter
    • 16 | Facing the Abyss by Todd Gitlin
    • 17 | Beyond Port Huron: The Indiana “Subversion” Case Fifty Years Later by Alan Wald
  • Part III. Connections
    • 18 | Refugees from the Fifties by Ruth Rosen
    • 19 | The Empire at Home: Radical Pacifism and Puerto Rico in the 1950s by Andrea Friedman
    • 20 | Radical Pacifism in the Long 1950s: Forging New Forms of Protest and Dissent by Marian Mollin
    • 21 | An Ending and a Beginning: James Boggs, C. L. R. James, and The American Revolution by Stephen M. Ward
    • 22 | The Religious Origins of Reies López Tijerina’s Land Grant Activism in the Southwest by Ramón A. Gutiérrez
    • 23 | Before the Birth of Asian America: Asian Americans and the New Left by Daryl Joji Maeda
    • 24 | The Ann Arbor Teach-In and Beyond: An Oral History by Richard D. Mann
    • 25 | New Indians in the New Frontier by Paul Chaat Smith
  • Part IV. Comparisons
    • 26 | The German New Left and Participatory Democracy: The Impact on Social, Cultural, and Political Change by Michael Vester
    • 27 | European New Lefts, Global Connections, and the Problem of Difference by Rita Chin
    • 28 | “Thought Is Action for Us”: Lloyd Best, New World, and the West Indian Postcolonial Left by Paul Hébert
    • 29 | On the Shores of Japan’s Postwar Left: An Intimate History by Leslie Pincus
    • 30 | Ashamed of Being Middle Class: Mexico’s 1968 Student Movement and Its Legacy by Louise E. Walker
  • Part V. In Memoriam
    • 31 | New Left Melancholia, or Paul Potter Swallows Television by Michael Szalay
    • 32 | Shulamith Firestone, Social Defeat, and Sixties Radicalism by Alice Echols
  • Part VI. Insurgency Anew
    • 33 | Envisioning Another World: Port Huron’s Continuing Relevance by Dick Flacks
    • 34 | The Wisconsin Uprising and Women’s Power: Report from Madison by Mari Jo Buhle and Paul Buhle
    • 35 | Democracy and the Arab Upheavals of 2011 and After by Juan Cole
    • 36 | Post-Occupy by Sarah Leonard and Sarah Jaffe
    • 37 | Movements for Real Democracy: “The People Must Rule!” by Marina Sitrin
  • Contributors
  • Notes
Citable Link
Published: 2015
Publisher: Michigan Publishing, University of Michigan Library
ISBN(s)
  • 978-1-60785-743-3 (open access)
  • 978-1-60785-351-0 (ebook)
  • 978-1-60785-350-3 (hardcover)
Series
  • Maize Books
Subject
  • Political Science / American Politics
  • History / Intellectual History
  • Political Science / Comparative Politics
  • Political Science / Political History
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