Published September 1980 | Version Published
Working Paper Open

Radicalism and the limits of reform : the case of John Reed

Abstract

Poet, journalist, editorial board member of the Masses and founding member of the Communist Labor Party, John Reed is a hero in both the worlds of cultural and political radicalism. This paper shows how his development through pre-World War One Bohemia and into left wing politics was part of a larger movement of middle class youngsters who were in that era in reaction against the reform mentality of their parent's generation. Reed and his peers were critical of the following, common reformist views: that economic individualism is the engine of progress; that the ideas and morals of WASP America are superior to those of all other ethnic groups; that the practical constitutes the best approach to social life. By tracing Reed's development on these issues one can see that his generation was critical of a larger cultural view, a system of beliefs common to middle class reformers and conservatives alike. Their revolt was thus primarily cultural, one which tested the psychic boundaries, the definitions of humanity, that reformers shared as part of their class.

Additional Information

To be published in a volume of essays honoring George Mowry

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Identifiers

Eprint ID
14955
Resolver ID
CaltechAUTHORS:20090811-112648325

Dates

Created
2009-08-17
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Updated
2019-10-03
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Caltech Custom Metadata

Caltech groups
Humanities Working Papers
Series Name
Humanities Working Paper
Series Volume or Issue Number
52