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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 5 page paper provides a concise overview of the perspectives of Godfrey Hodgson and Todd Gitlin regarding the process by which the American liberal consensus of the 1960s unraveled. This paper reflects upon a number of different stages and significant shifts and considers the arguments presented by both authors. No additional sources cited.
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5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_1960lib.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
liberal consciousness. Further, it can be argued that both of these authors went as far as to suggest that these events determined the complete unraveling of the American liberal
consciousness through a set of stages and fundamental shifts. A number of distinct historical and sociological events reshaped the national liberal sensibilities, and the transformation of the modern liberal
democratic perspective during this period came as the result of the reshaping of the political consciousness. Todd Gitlin recognized the end of the 1960s as a period of increasing polarization
between the two political parties, a process through which the decline of liberal sensibilities and the end of an era of reformation. At the onset of the 1960s, an
increasing liberal perspectives had shaped the political climate and the emerging Black Power movement had served to initiate the transformation of the American liberal identity. Suddenly, divisions between those
who believed they were political correct and the institutional focus led to clashes between police and protesters that had lasting impacts on the development of a the liberal ideal.
It is not surprising that fundamental political change was also linked to catastrophic events in the midst of turmoil surrounding the Civil Rights Movement and the Vietnam War.
The assassinations of Martin Luther King, Jr., Robert Kennedy and the substantive divisions regarding the Vietnam War all sparked a level of governmental skepticism that defined the liberal sensibility, but
also led to the transformation of the liberal idealism (Gitlin 285). The initial changes occurred between what was deemed the "old left" and the new democratic movement, and the
foundations of the new order based to a greater degree in the constructs of the governmental design. The progression, then, from the student radical movement in the early sixties
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