Simon Fanshawe: Flaws of the '60s Inheritance

  • 10 years ago
Simon Fanshawe: Flaws of the '60s Inheritance
The Institute of Ideas - Institute of Ideas
All year, commentators of a certain age have bored us with reminiscences about their radical youth. Should we even care? Perhaps we should: after all, the Spring and Summer of 1968 saw revolts and uprisings across the world, from Paris and London to Prague to the American South and Northern Ireland.For some it was about opposition to the war in Vietnam, or solidarity with striking workers; for others it was about the fight for civil rights or women’s liberation; still more took on the stuffy traditionalism and bureaucracy of the education system. And lest we forget, the 1960s also gave us 'sex and drugs and rock' n' roll'.So what is the legacy of ‘68? Compared to the politics of today the late sixties were a period of unbridled political optimism: young people felt they were building the future. The dream of a new society seemed one that could, and should, be made reality.To be part of 'the movement' was to be a 'utopian' and a 'radical'. But 'radical' is no longer an acceptable prefix in politics. What’s changed?Some of the '68 generation have become critics of a period they see as at best naive, at worst a conscious attempt to destroy the very fabric of society: the state, the family and community would not be in such a bad way now if not for the reckless anti-authoritarianism of the 68ers, they suggest. Others have swapped idealism and kaftans for grey suits and pragmatism. Are they right?Looking back, what seems remarkable is that the elites of Western society offered so little in the way of resistance to their youthful challengers. Was society really transformed by the 68ers, or would it be more accurate to say traditional institutions collapsed from within?Why were the rebels of 1968 unable to inscribe the spirit of the moment in lasting institutions of their own? Are today’s intellectual relativism and conspicuous consumption the true legacy of 1968?Should we reclaim radicalism and utopianism for the 21st century - or is the pragmatism of the present a more sensible option all round?Does an obsession with the sixties as a period of political optimism simply express our current limited political imagination? - Institute of Ideas

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