The True and Only Heaven Progress and Its Critics

by
Edition: 00
Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 1991-09-17
Publisher(s): W. W. Norton & Company
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Summary

Can we continue to believe in progress? In this sobering analysis of the Western human condition, Christopher Lasch seeks the answer in a history of the struggle between two ideas: one is the idea of progress - an idea driven by the conviction that human desire is insatiable and requires ever larger production forces. Opposing this materialist view is the idea that condemns a boundless appetite for more and better goods and distrusts "improvements" that only feed desire. Tracing the opposition to the idea of progress from Rousseau through Montesquieu to Carlyle, Max Weber and G.D.H. Cole, Lasch finds much that is desirable in a turn toward moral conservatism, toward a lower-middle-class culture that features egalitarianism, workmanship and loyalty, and recognizes the danger of resentment of the material goods of others.

Table of Contents

Preface 13(8)
Introduction: The Obsolescence of Left and Right
The Current Mood
21(1)
Limits: The Forbidden Topic
22(3)
The Making of a Malcontent
25(6)
The Land of Opportunity: A Parent's View
31(4)
The Party of the Future and Its Quarrel with ``Middle America''
35(3)
The Promised Land of the New Right
38(2)
The Idea Of Progress Reconsidered
A Secular Religion?
40(1)
Belief in Progress as the Antidote to Despair
41(3)
Against the ``Secularization Thesis''
44(3)
What the Idea of Progress Really Means
47(2)
Providence and Fortune, Grace and Virtue
49(3)
Adam Smith's Rehabilitation of Desire
52(3)
Smith's Misgivings about ``General Security and Happiness''
55(3)
Desire Domesticated
58(5)
Henry George on Progress and Poverty
63(4)
Inconspicuous Consumption, the ``Superlative Machine''
67(5)
The Keynesian Critique of Thrift
72(6)
Optimism or Hope?
78(4)
Nostalgia: The Abdication of Memory
Memory or Nostalgia?
82(2)
The Pastoral Sensibility Historicized and Popularized
84(3)
Images of Childhood: From Gratitude to Pathos
87(5)
The American West, Childhood of the Nation
92(5)
From Solitary Hunter to He-man
97(3)
The Village Idyll: The View from ``Pittsburgh''
100(5)
Nostalgia Named as Such: The Twenties
105(5)
History as a Progression of Cultural Styles
110(2)
Nostalgia Politicized
112(5)
The Frozen Past
117(3)
The Sociological Tradition and the Idea of Community
Cosmopolitanism and Enlightenment
120(4)
The Enlightenment's Critique of Particularism
124(3)
The Reaction against Enlightenment: Burke's Defense of Prejudice
127(6)
Action, Behavior, and the Discovery of ``Society''
133(2)
Culture against Civilization
135(4)
Gemeinsscbaftscbmerz
139(4)
The Moral Ambivalence of the Sociological Tradition
143(5)
Marxism, the Party of the Future
148(5)
The Structure of Historical Necessity
153(5)
``Modernization'' as an Answer to Marxism
158(4)
The Last Refuge of Modernization Theory
162(6)
The Populist Campaign Against ``Improvement''
The Current Prospect: Progress or Catastrophe?
168(2)
The Discovery of Civic Humanism
170(2)
The Civic Tradition in Recent Historical Writing
172(5)
Tom Paine: Liberal or Republican?
177(4)
William Cobbett and the ``Paper System''
181(3)
Orestes Brownson and the Divorce between Politics and Religion
184(5)
Brownson's Attack on Philanthropy
189(6)
Lockean Liberalism: A ``Bourgeois'' Ideology?
195(8)
Early Opposition to Wage Labor
203(3)
Acceptance of Wage Labor and Its Implications
206(3)
The New Labor History and the Rediscovery of the Artisan
209(3)
Artisans against Innovation
212(5)
Agrarian Populism: The Producer's Last Stand
217(4)
The Essence of Nineteenth-Century Populism
221(5)
``No Answer But an Echo'': The World Without Wonder
Carlyle's Clothes Philosophy
226(4)
Calvinism as Social Criticism
230(3)
Puritan Virtue
233(3)
``The Healthy Know Not of Their Health''
236(3)
Carlyle and the Prophetic Tradition
239(1)
Political and Literary Misreadings of Carlyle
240(3)
Emerson in His Contemporaries' Eyes: Stoic and ``Seer''
243(3)
The Puritan Background of Emerson's Thought: Jonathan Edwards and the Theology of ``Consent''
246(5)
Edwards on True Virtue
251(5)
The ``Moral Argument'' against Calvinism
256(5)
Emerson on Fate
261(4)
``Compensation'': The Theology of Producerism
265(5)
Emerson as a Populist
270(4)
Virtue, the ``True Fire''
274(3)
Virtue in Search of a Calling
277(2)
The Eclipse of Idealism in the Gilded Age
279(3)
William James: The Last Puritan?
282(2)
The Philosophy of Wonder
284(2)
Art and Science: New Religions
286(4)
The Strenuous Life of Sainthood
290(2)
Superstition or Desiccation?
292(4)
The Syndicalist Moment: Class Struggle and Workers' Control as the Moral Equivalent of Proprietorship and War
The Cult of ``Mere Excitement''
296(4)
James on Moral Equivalence
300(4)
Sorel's Attack on Progress
304(4)
The Case for ``Pessimism''
308(2)
War as Discipline against Resentment
310(2)
The Sectarian Dilemma
312(5)
Wage Slavery and the ``Servile State'': G. D. H. Cole and Guild Socialism
317(3)
The Attempt to Reconcile Syndicalism with Collectivism
320(4)
From Workers' Control to ``Community'': The Absorption of Guild Socialism by Social Democracy
324(5)
Work and Loyalty in the Social Thought of the ``Progressive'' Era
Progressive and Social Democratic Criticism of American Syndicalism
329(3)
Revolutionary Socialism versus Syndicalism: The Case of William English Walling
332(4)
The IWW and the Intellectuals: Love at First Sight
336(4)
Herbert Croly on ``Industrial Self-Government''
340(2)
Walter Weyl's Orthodox Progressivism: The Democracy of Consumers
342(3)
Rival Perspectives on the Democratization of Culture
345(3)
Van Wyck Brooks and the Search for a ``Genial Middle Ground''
348(5)
The Controversy about Immigration: Assimilation or Cultural Pluralism?
353(3)
Royce's Philosophy of Loyalty
356(4)
The Postwar Reaction against Progressivism
360(3)
Lippmann's Farewell to Virtue
363(3)
Dewey's Reply to Lippmann: Too Little Too Late
366(3)
The Spiritual Discipline Against Resentment
Reinhold Niebuhr on Christian Mythology
369(4)
The Virtue of Particularism
373(3)
The ``Endless Cycle of Social Conflict'' and How to Break It
376(3)
Niebuhr's Challenge to Liberalism Denatured and Deflected
379(3)
Liberal Realism after Niebuhr: The Critique of Tribalism
382(4)
Martin Luther King's Encounter with Niebuhr
386(4)
Hope without Optimism
390(3)
Indigenous Origins of the Civil Rights Movement
393(5)
The Collapse of the Civil Rights Movement in the North
398(4)
From Civil Rights to Social Democracy
402(5)
The Politics of Resentment and Reparation
407(5)
The Politics of the Civilized Minority
Liberal Perceptions of the Public after World War I
412(4)
America the Unbeautiful
416(5)
Social Criticism, Disembodied and Connected
421(3)
Sociology as Social Criticism: The Apotheosis of the Expert
424(5)
Experts and Orators: Thurman Arnold's ``Anthropological'' Satire
429(6)
The ``Machiavelli'' of the Managerial Revolution
435(4)
From Satire to Social Pathology: Gunnar Myrdal on the ``American Dilemma''
439(6)
The Discovery of the Authoritarian Personality
445(5)
Politics as Therapy
450(5)
The Liberal Critique of Populism
455(5)
Populism as Working-Class Authoritarianism
460(5)
Educated Insularity
465(3)
Camelot after Kennedy: Oswald as Everyman
468(8)
Right-Wing Populism and the Revolt Against Liberalism
The ``White Backlash''
476(3)
A Growing Middle Class?
479(4)
Working-Class and Lower-Middle-Class Convergence
483(4)
The Lower-Middle-Class Ethic of Limits and the Abortion Debate
487(5)
The Cultural Class War
492(4)
The Politics of Race: Antibusing Agitation in Boston
496(8)
``Populism'' and the New Right
504(5)
The Theory of the New Class and Its Historical Antecedents
509(3)
Neoconservatives on the New Class
512(6)
New-Class ``Permissiveness'' or Capitalist Consumerism?
518(5)
The New Class as Seen from the Left
523(4)
A Universal Class?
527(2)
Populism against Progress
529(4)
Bibliographical Essay 533(38)
Index 571

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