This book analyzes the continuity and change within socialist
thought in this century and the perception by socialists of
themselves as both a part of an American movement having concrete
goals yet operating within the ideological framework of social
democracy. The author focuses on the socialists' understanding of
American democracy and the modern capitalist system and their
prescriptions for social change. He examines the moderate socialism
of Morris Hillquit, John Spargo, and Victor Berger and the
groundwork laid for later radical variants of American socialism
found in the writings of Louis Fraina and Louis Boudin. Hyfler
explores the links connecting the radical working class socialism
of Eugene Debs and the Wobblies with the accommodationism of Samuel
Gompers and mainstream labor. Later chapters analyze Norman Thomas'
move away from Marxist thinking and Michael Harrington's innovative
attempts to create an American socialist perspective that can
operate on the center stage of the American polity without
compromising the radical traditions of the American left.
General
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