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Historically Speaking | 2011

Twenty Suggestions for Studying the Right Now that Studying the Right Is Trendy

Leo P. Ribuffo

broadly conceived. Subtitles of books that not so long ago would have ended with “and the persistence of capitalist hegemony” or “and the pervasiveness of status anxiety” now end with “and the rise of conservatism.” This is the second such boom since World War II. The first discovery of American conservatism involved many of our favorite straw-man targets, including Richard Hofstadter, Daniel Bell, and Seymour Martin Lipset. Typically those scholars involved in the first discovery of the Right traced the story back at least to the Constitution. Typically, too, they paid close attention to government, economics, nationalism, foreign policy, and war at the expense of race and gender. Despite their mistakes, the best of these self-consciously centrist historians and social scientists were very smart and worthy of serious engagement. Moreover, the intellectual cohort of the first discoverers extended beyond the “vital center” (in Arthur Schlesinger, Jr.’s famous phrase) to include the radical sociologist C. Wright Mills and sometime conservative political scientist Clinton Rossiter. Most important were the rival grand narratives of American history offered by William Appleman Williams in The Contours of American History (1961) and Schlesinger everywhere. When I make this point to newly minted experts involved in the second discovery of the Right, the usual response, accompanied by a blank look, is something like: “I don’t know what you mean. I’m writing a thick description of fifty Birchers in Binghamton.” The first discovery of the Right petered out during the High Sixties. There was nonetheless an in-between cohort of about forty historians, most now in our sixties, who did terrific work. Names will be provided on request—except for one scholar who deserves to be singled out for praise: George Nash.1 The historical profession should be ashamed of itself that Nash never received a major, full-time appointment as a professor. Unlike the rediscovery of American radicalism


Diplomatic History | 2001

An Empire, Then a Republic?

Leo P. Ribuffo

Book reviewed in this article: Patrick J. Buchanan,.A Republic, Not an Empire: Reclaiming Americas Destiny


The American Historical Review | 1994

Why is there so much conservatism in the United States and why do so few historians know anything

Leo P. Ribuffo


Review of Policy Research | 2006

Family Policy Past As Prologue: Jimmy Carter, the White House Conference on Families, and the Mobilization of the New Christian Right1

Leo P. Ribuffo


The American Historical Review | 1993

Right Center Left: Essays in American History.

R. Laurence Moore; Leo P. Ribuffo


Archive | 1987

The Twilight Struggle: Tales of the Cold War

Leo P. Ribuffo


Pacific Historical Review | 2016

Review: American Apocalypse: A History of Modern Evangelicalism by Matthew Avery Sutton

Leo P. Ribuffo


Pacific Historical Review | 2014

Book Review: Zaretsky, Why America Needs a Left: A Historical Argument, by Leo P. Ribuffo

Leo P. Ribuffo


Pacific Historical Review | 2013

Hollywood Left and Right: How Movie Stars Shaped American Politics . By Steven J. Ross . ( New York , Oxford University Press , 2011 . xi + 500 pp.

Leo P. Ribuffo


The Journal of American History | 2011

29.95 )

Leo P. Ribuffo

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