Origin Story

The New Left – Part Two – Children of the Revolution

38 snips
Dec 6, 2025
Explore the electrifying year of 1968 as global protests erupted, led by youth demanding change. Discover how iconic figures like John Lennon saw revolution on the horizon, despite the New Left's fragmentation. Learn about the rise of second-wave feminism and gay liberation, shifting the focus from class struggle to broader social movements. Delve into Antonio Gramsci's ideas on hegemony, which provided new strategies for activism. Reflect on the New Left's legacy, influencing modern politics, identity, and cultural rights.
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INSIGHT

May 1968: Utopia Meets Institutional Power

  • Paris's May 1968 protests briefly created self-governing, horizontal societies and direct-democracy experiments in the Latin Quarter.
  • But unions and the Communist Party refused to join, and de Gaulle used institutional levers to reassert control.
INSIGHT

Size Without Structure Invites Extremists

  • Rapid SDS growth in the US diluted organization and allowed harder-line Marxists to seize leadership.
  • That internal fragmentation undermined the movement's ability to build sustained mass politics.
ANECDOTE

SDS Collapse And The Weathermen Split

  • The SDS imploded at its final convention in Chicago amid fistfights and factional takeovers by rival Maoist groups.
  • The Weathermen later split off, went underground, and engaged in mostly inept violent actions.
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