***WHEN TO BE YOUNG WAS VERY HEAVEN –With
THE SIXTIES: YEARS OF HOPE-DAYS OF RAGE In
Mind
From The Pen Of Frank Jackman
A while back, actually about five years ago, I was
on a tear about various 1960’s movements for social change –the defense of the Cuban
Revolution, a revolution witnessed with starry eyes on black and white
television directly and with a sense that the fellahin of the world could
actually win sometimes, the fight for nuclear disarmament that was extremely
pressing as we were in the throes of a hard red scare cold war night, the
centrally important black civil rights fight also witnessed on black and white
television with the imperative that they needed to win that fight, the struggle
against the Vietnam War in America that defined the contours of our battles later
in the decade, and the emerging struggles for women’s and gay rights that would
gather steam and grow exponentially during the next forty years. I noted that many
of those struggles had animated my youth and had also acted as the touch-stone
for all my subsequent social and political activism, That swirling time,
chaotic in its own way, mistake-ridden in its own way as in any youthful
endeavor, produced in its aftermath more questions than answers about the way
to go about creating that “newer world” we were all chasing one way or another.
Certainly once the swirl died down toward the early 1970s (we can argue, as I
have elsewhere, about when that swirl actually ebbed but that is a thought for
another time) one was forced to think through what had gone wrong (and a few
things right too, no question). Forced to think thorough the how and why of a
movement that had turned to dust when just a few years before it had the
possibility of turning history on
another axis. Ultimately, for a few (too few) of us, also the necessity of
thinking about the struggle to change the social organization of American
society-the fight for socialism. In short, questions about 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. 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 not unimportant fact of lack
of a critical mass of militant leftists who could have assimilated and
transmitted those experiences, which 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.
That said, we are not talking about the working-
class 1960’s here, 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 my intimate personal experience and therefore is a good place to
start.
In the usual case this writer has spent his 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 deal with
events that made up his youth. All the signposts of my youth have been described
and analyzed from the ‘beats’ through Cuba to the civil rights movement and
eventually through the struggle against the Vietnam War.
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 one must deal with 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 Williams and other cultural
figures. Such figures rather than, let us say, Che Guevara, acted as a catalyst
to more away from the mainstream society, to find a safe harbor niche, and not
change it. The rise of the counterculture movement bears witness to that
effect. It was easy enough to challenge the staid red scare cold war orthodoxy
of the 1950’s it was another to have seen a way out. None of these phenomena
pretended to or sought to do so.
One gets closer to the core of the influences upon
the sixties generation when one 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 roll up 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 liberal mystique-it never really got resolved then (and still hasn’t
today).
The central organizational expression of the
student/youth rebellion, especially on the campuses, was Students for
Democratic Society (SDS). One can draw a line through the political and
organizational ups and downs of SDS accurately and with a certain amount of
insight and trace the long curve of the 1960s. With a couple of caveats though-
one should not become 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 Weathermen-like interventions that brought about the demise of
the organization in 1969. One moreover
could not believe 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 stuff about the period and
learn why all those who thoughtfully lived through it would almost all agree
that in the 1960’s “to be young was very heaven.”
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