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Christopher Lasch

Robert Christopher Lasch (June 1, 1932 – February 14, 1994) was an American historian, moralist and social critic who was a history professor at the University of Rochester. He sought to use history to demonstrate what he saw as the pervasiveness with which major institutions, public and private, were eroding the competence and independence of families and communities. Lasch strove to create a historically informed social criticism that could teach Americans how to deal with rampant consumerism, proletarianization, and what he famously labeled "the culture of narcissism".

His books, including The New Radicalism in America (1965), Haven in a Heartless World (1977), The Culture of Narcissism (1979), The True and Only Heaven (1991), and The Revolt of the Elites and the Betrayal of Democracy (published posthumously in 1996) were widely discussed and reviewed. The Culture of Narcissism became a surprise best-seller and won the National Book Award in the category Current Interest (paperback).[6][a]


Lasch was always a critic of modern liberalism and a historian of liberalism's discontents, but over time, his political perspective evolved dramatically. In the 1960s, he was a neo-Marxist and acerbic critic of Cold War liberalism. During the 1970s, he combined certain aspects of cultural conservatism with a left-leaning critique of capitalism, and drew on Freud-influenced critical theory to diagnose the ongoing deterioration that he perceived in American culture and politics. His writings are sometimes denounced by feminists[7] and hailed by conservatives[8] for his apparent defense of a traditional conception of family life.


He eventually concluded that an often unspoken, but pervasive, faith in "Progress" tended to make Americans resistant to many of his arguments. In his last major works he explored this theme in depth, suggesting that Americans had much to learn from the suppressed and misunderstood populist and artisan movements of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.[9]

Ideas[edit]

The New Radicalism in America[edit]

Lasch's earliest argument, anticipated partly by Hofstadter's concern with the cycles of fragmentation among radical movements in the United States, was that American radicalism had at some point in the past become socially untenable. Members of "the Left" had abandoned their former commitments to economic justice and suspicion of power, to assume professionalized roles and to support commoditized lifestyles which hollowed out communities' self-sustaining ethics. His first major book, The New Radicalism in America: The Intellectual as a Social Type, published in 1965 (with a promotional blurb from Hofstadter), expressed those ideas in the form of a bracing critique of twentieth-century liberalism's efforts to accrue power and restructure society, while failing to follow up on the promise of the New Deal.[25] Most of his books, even the more strictly historical ones, include such sharp criticism of the priorities of alleged "radicals" who represented merely extreme formations of a rapacious capitalist ethos.


His basic thesis about the family, which he first expressed in 1965 and explored for the rest of his career, was:

1962: The American Liberals and the Russian Revolution.

[10]

1965: The New Radicalism in America 1889–1963: The Intellectual As a Social Type.

1969: The Agony of the American Left.

[10]

1973: The World of Nations.

1977: Haven in a Heartless World: The Family Besieged.

1979: .[6]

The Culture of Narcissism: American Life in an Age of Diminishing Expectations

1984: The Minimal Self: Psychic Survival in Troubled Times.

1991: The True and Only Heaven: Progress and Its Critics.

1994: The Revolt of the Elites: And the Betrayal of Democracy, , ISBN 978-0-39331371-0

W. W. Norton & Company

1997: Women and the Common Life: Love, Marriage, and Feminism.

2002: Plain Style: A Guide to Written English.

Cultural narcissism

Rhetoric of therapy

Obituary: , The Independent.

The New York Times

Writings of Christopher Lasch:

The New York Review of Books

The Pursuit of Progress, 1991 interview on 's The Open Mind: on the Daily Motion; on Youtube.

Richard Heffner

The Writings of Christopher Lasch: A Bibliography-in-Progress / Compiled by Robert Cummings (last updated 2003)

On the Moral Vision of Democracy: A Conversation with Christopher Lasch

by Paul Gottfried

Voices Against Progress: What I Learned from Genovese, Lasch, and Bradford