WHEN TO BE YOUNG WAS VERY HEAVEN, PART II
DVD REVIEW
REBELS WITH A CAUSE, 2000
DON’T REMINISCE-ORGANIZE!
THE SIXTIES: YEARS OF HOPE-DAYS OF RAGE, TODD GITLIN,
BANTAM BOOKS, NEW YORK, 1987
In previous reviews in this
space this writer has alluded several
times to the 1960’s movements for social change –the defense of the Cuban
Revolution, the fight for nuclear disarmament, the centrally important black
civil rights fight, the struggle against the Vietnam War and the emerging
struggles for women’s and gay rights. And ultimately, for a few (too few) of
us, the necessary struggle to change the social organization of American
society-the fight for socialism. In short, all the signposts for that part of a
political generation, my generation, which in shorthand I will call the
Generation of ’68. Let us be clear, nostalgia and the ravages of time on the
memory on the part of this writer aside, this was a short but intense period
that he believes requires serious study.
Militant leftists today face
many, if not all, of the social problems that confronted the generation of ’68.
Thus, a careful viewing of this film is warranted by those who want to
understand what went right and what went wrong with student movement centered
on the Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) of the 1960’s that held out much
promise but in the end left the field to the ugly predator capitalists and
their agents. Many of the points discussed in this documentary parallel those made in Professor Todd Gitlin’s seminal
book: THE SIXTIES: YEARS OF HOPE, DAYS OF RAGE. I have fully reviewed that
important book elsewhere. One can profit from using both sources, although
Professor Gitlin is now as then a political opponent of mine.
I would add two additional
comments concerning the ‘talking heads’ that are used to tell the story of the
student struggles. I found that no one of interviewees mentioned the word
socialism as an animating force behind their very deeply held convictions at
the time. Now that is neither her nor there except that in the end the fight
for socialism was dictated by the struggles not only for its positive social
value but as the only way to effective fight in the ‘belly of the beast’. That
tells part of the tale. The other is that these people have ‘made it’ in
capitalist society, as the final credits make clear, since that time. However,
we have a little problem that the ‘monster’ is still with us. I would be the
last to begrudge anyone from that time their memories of a time ‘when to be
young was very heaven’. But I prefer the slogan – Don’t
Reminisce-Organize!
While it is entirely possible
for today’s militant leftist youth to start fresh and ignore what for all of
them is at best a mythical experience- that would be short-sighted. I agree, due to the lack of a critical mass
of militant leftists who could have assimilated and transmitted those experiences,
that a militant movement today could get along without knowing anything about
the 1960’s. However, at some point the issues, the conflicts, the struggle for
a victorious strategy to fight the monster (otherwise known as American
imperialism) will be replayed. Believe me it is never fruitless to learn
something from the past.
Professor Gitlin has written
in the currently reviewed volume what is probably the definitive general survey
of the central events that roiled American (and eventually, much of Western
society) in the 1960’s. That said, we are not talking about the working class
1960’s, we are not talking about the 1960’s of the mainly middle class parents
of the generation of ’68. We are most definitely not talking about the
Vietnamese people’s 1960’s. In fact we are not talking about an experience that
most of the people during that period experienced except as media events or at
the margins. What we are talking about is the youth explosions of the 1960’s,
their repercussions, effects and legacies. This is the area of Professor
Gitlin’s intimate personal experience and therefore is a good place to
start.
In the usual case this writer
spends his book reviewing time describing and analyzing events that occurred
before his time. Things like the American, French and Russian Revolutions. It is therefore with certain amount of
pleasant, if not nostalgia, that he can review a book that deals with events
that made up not only the author’s but my youth. All the signposts of my youth
are described and analyzed there from the ‘beats’ through Cuba to the civil
rights movement and eventually through the struggle against the Vietnam War.
That said, the author and this reviewer have very different interpretations of
the meaning of the events at the time and the inevitable lessons to be drawn
from then.
Professor Gitlin takes us
through the necessary influences which formed the basis for the 1960’s revolt.
It is always problematic whether the general cultural climate or particular
prior events had much influence on what followed later. It is easier to see
both influences in hindsight and to over-analyze their importance. Nevertheless
he takes us through the trials and tribulations of the ‘beats’, the rise and
mainstream commercialization of the original rock and roll movement and the
initial youth culture rebellion through such figures as James Dean, Marlon
Brando, the work of Tennessee’s Williams and other cultural figures. It strikes
me that such figures rather than, let us say, Che Guevara, acted as a catalyst
to move away from the mainstream society and not change it. The rise of the
counterculture movement bears witness to that effect. It is easy enough to
challenge the orthodoxy of the 1950’s it is another to have seen a way out.
None of these phenomena pretended to or sought to do so.
Professor Gitlin gets closer
to the core of the influences upon the sixties generation when he discusses the
Kennedy Administration, particularly after the Bay of Pigs fiascos. Two issues
galvanized youth- the struggle against nuclear war and the struggle for black
civil rights. The pretensions of the Kennedy administration to form a liberal
society were the legitimate and logical
target for the increasing numbers of young who wanted to take the Kennedys at
their word- the need to rollup your sleeves and change society. However, the
Kennedys did not expect that change to start with them as the targets. The
early movement started with that love/hate relationship with the liberals-it
never rally got resolved (and still hasn’t today).
The central organizational
expression of the student/youth rebellion and the key to Professor Gitlin’s
political perspective then, especially on the campuses, was Students for
Democratic Society (SDS). Professor Gitlin was an early president of that
organization and therefore can and generally does present the political and
organizational ups and downs of SDS accurately and with a certain amount of
insight. A couple of caveats though- he is very wedded to the notion that early
SDS and its ‘old politicos’ network was something of Golden Age tarnished by the later craziness of
Progressive Labor and Weatherman interventions that brought about the demise of
the organization in 1969. In short, he takes a fundamentally social democratic
side on the reformist vs. revolutionary question. Professor Gitlin also suffers
from a belief that the student movement by itself could have then led the fight
for social change as some kind of ‘new class’ to lead a new society. If nothing
else the history of the last forty years of campus life has cruelly placed that
theory in the shade. Nevertheless read this book and learn why we would both
agree that in the 1960’s ‘to be young was very heaven’.
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