
A New Insurgency: The Port Huron Statement and Its Times
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: Ann Arbor, MI: Michigan Publishing, University of Michigan Library, 2015.
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Table of Contents
- [Dedication]
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Prologue
-
I. Experiences: Being There
- Introduction
- 1 | A Call, Again
—
- 2 | Experiencing the Sixties at the Intersection of SDS and SNCC —
- 3 | Returning to Ann Arbor —
- 4 | Many Inheritances . . . One Legacy —
- 5 | Reflections on SDS and the 1960s Movements for Social Justice —
- 6 | Reflections on Women and the Culture of Port Huron —
- 7 | The Evolution of a Radical’s Consciousness: Living an Authentic Life —
- 8 | Port Huron: Where’s the Labor Section?
—
- 9 | It’s Time to Change the Water in the Fish Tank —
- 10 | Democracy, Labor, and Globalization: Reflections on Port Huron
—
-
II. Contexts: The Making of an American New Left
- Introduction
- 11 | Lefts Old and New: Sixties Radicalism, Now and Then —
- 12 | Of Little Rocks and Levittowns: The Northern Racial Landscape and the Origins of the 1960s New Left
—
- 13 | The Lightning Bolt That Sparked the Port Huron Statement
—
- 14 | A New Left Philosophical Itinerary: Marcuse, Sartre, and Then Camus —
- 15 | Participatory Art as Participatory Democracy: The American Avant-Garde in the 1950s and 1960s
—
- 16 | Facing the Abyss —
- 17 | Beyond Port Huron: The Indiana “Subversion” Case Fifty Years Later
—
-
III. Connections: The Sixties Movement of Movements
- Introduction
- 18 | Refugees from the Fifties
—
- 19 | The Empire at Home: Radical Pacifism and Puerto Rico in the 1950s
—
- 20 | Radical Pacifism in the Long 1950s: Forging New Forms of Protest and Dissent
—
- 21 | An Ending and a Beginning: James Boggs, C. L. R. James, and The American Revolution
—
- 22 | The Religious Origins of Reies López Tijerina’s Land Grant Activism in the Southwest —
- 23 | Before the Birth of Asian America: Asian Americans and the New Left
—
- 24 | The Ann Arbor Teach-In and Beyond: An Oral History —
- 25 | New Indians in the New Frontier —
-
IV. Comparisons: Global New Lefts
- Introduction
- 26 | The German New Left and Participatory Democracy: The Impact on Social, Cultural, and Political Change
—
- 27 | European New Lefts, Global Connections, and the Problem of Difference —
- 28 | “Thought Is Action for Us”: Lloyd Best, New World, and the West Indian Postcolonial Left —
- 29 | On the Shores of Japan’s Postwar Left: An Intimate History —
- 30 | Ashamed of Being Middle Class: Mexico’s 1968 Student Movement and Its Legacy
—
- V. In Memoriam
- VI. Insurgency Anew: Participatory Democracy at Fifty
- Contributors
-
Notes