By the spring of 1969, Students for a Democratic Society (SDS)
had reached its zenith as the largest, most radical movement of
white youth in American history-a genuine New Left. Yet less than a
year later, SDS splintered into warring factions and ceased to
exist.
SDS's development and its dissolution grew directly out of the
organization's relations with the black freedom movement, the
movement against the Vietnam War, and the newly emerging struggle
for women's liberation. For a moment, young white people could
comprehend their world in new and revolutionary ways. But New
Leftists did not respond as a tabula rasa. On the contrary, these
young people's consciousnesses, their culture, their identities had
arisen out of a history which, for hundreds of years, had
privileged white over black, men over women, and America over the
rest of the world. Such a history could not help but distort the
vision and practice of these activists, good intentions
notwithstanding.
"A Hard Rain Fell: SDS and Why It Failed" traces these activists
in their relation to other movements and demonstrates that the New
Left\'s dissolution flowed directly from SDS's failure to break
with traditional American notions of race, sex, and empire.
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