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The Thirty Years' Wars: Dispatches and Diversions of a Radical Journalist, 1965-1994.


THE late Andrew Kopkind was perhaps the premier radical journalist of his time. After quitting Time in disgust, he became an early promoter of the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee As a focal point for student activism in the 1960s, the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC, popularly called Snick) spearheaded major initiatives in the Civil Rights Movement.  and Students for a Democratic Society Students for a Democratic Society (SDS), in U.S. history, a radical student organization of the 1960s. In the influential Port Huron (Mich.) Statement (1962), the organization, founded in 1960, presented its vision for post–Vietnam War America and called for . In the Sixties his essays appeared in Ramparts, Mayday, and The New York Review of Books (in its early, radical phase); he ended his career at The Nation. This collection chronicles his political and personal odysseys over thirty years. The two were never separable for him: he once wrote that his political work had "obliterated the emptiness of the life [he] had grown up with in the Fifties." His emergence from the closet in the Seventies, like the Vietcong's resistance to "imperialism," was part of the struggle against oppression and for authenticity. In that struggle liberalism, permeated by bad faith and corrupted by the Cold War, was not a reliable ally. Kopkind hauls out liberal icons one by one -- King, RFK RFK Robert F. Kennedy
RFK Robotfindskitten (game)
RFK Razorfen Kraul (World of Warcraft)
RFK Ride For Kids
RFK Request for Knowledge
RFK Raum Funktionales Konzept
, McCarthy, Mondale -- and finds them wanting, incapable of remaking society. He pinned his hopes on Jesse Jackson for a time, but by 1992 had grown weary of "the Reverend's willingness to swallow any offal offal

1. nonmeat edible products from animal slaughter. Includes brains, thymus, pancreas, liver, heart, kidney, tripes, sausage casings, chitterlings, crackling rind.

2. by-product of milling, called also weatlings, middlings. A high-protein supplement for herbivores.
 so long as he can attend the banquet." His cultural and political analysis could be very sharp, whether he was discussing the rise and fall of the New Left or the "dialectic of disco." He had blind spots: the idealism that informed his analysis was unsentimental to the point of moral obtuseness ob·tuse  
adj. ob·tus·er, ob·tus·est
1.
a. Lacking quickness of perception or intellect.

b. Characterized by a lack of intelligence or sensitivity: an obtuse remark.
, a vice most evident in his treatment of the murder of Israeli athletes in Munich. But reading Kopkind is a pleasure: his prose style was clear, ideologically inflected in·flect  
v. in·flect·ed, in·flect·ing, in·flects

v.tr.
1. To alter (the voice) in tone or pitch; modulate.

2. Grammar To alter (a word) by inflection.

3.
, and bracing -- in a way that more responsible commentary perhaps can't be.
COPYRIGHT 1996 National Review, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1996, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Ponnuru, Ramesh
Publication:National Review
Article Type:Book Review
Date:Feb 26, 1996
Words:282
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