Liberalism and Its Discontents.
PETERSON, BARBARA BENNETT
ALAN BRINKLEY, Liberalism and Its Discontents (Cambridge, MA:
Harvard University Press, 1998), 372 pp., $27.95 cloth (ISBN 0-674-53017-9).
Liberalism and Its Discontents asks the basic questions, "What
is liberalism?" and "What has happened to it?" and offers
an excellent political and historiographical analysis of the liberal
tradition in America. Alan Brinkley challenges the theme of consensus
historians who stress that liberalism is America's only significant
political tradition. Brinkley suggests as his book's thesis that
other important ideological challenges to liberalism have always been
present in Americans' thinking as evidenced by the conservatism,
fundamentalism, or the radical left. Brinkley develops the liberal
traditions and policies from the 1930s and the New Deal, which expanded
through the postwar eras of the big federal and state governments
through the late 1990s with the advent of a serious conservative
challenge to liberalism. He clearly delineates the arguments of
consensus historians and shows how some may be flawed as economic,
cultural, and political changes in America through time have questioned
the basic premises of liberalism, and he shows how its tenets are
contested by various social power groups both from the right and the
left.
The theme of the consensus of historians that liberalism
represented the only common consensus of the majority of American
opinion makers and holders is questioned by Brinkley, who finds
liberalism today in disarray. Liberalism is in disarray, he postulated,
because of two main complaints: one that liberalism is
"paternalistic" and a "statist creed" that has
concentrated power in the hands of a few "elites at the expense of
individual liberty" and therefore threatens "freedom and
prosperity." Two, that on the other hand, liberalism is "too
wedded to liberty" and allows for excesses or the tryrany of the
majority, thus posing a threat to a stable moral code of ethics and
contributing to the "destabilizing whims of fractious minorities
and transitory passions" (p. x). Hence, critics, Brinkley states,
believe ironically that there is either too little or too much freedom
in liberalism. Brinkley then begins his book after this definition and
statement of thesis with the history of Franklin Delano Roosevelt and
the New Deal. Roosevelt and the New Deal embodied the tradition of
liberalism and represented the postwar idea of the consensus school in
historiography--"he was both a friend of the common people ... and
a creature of the American aristocracy. He was both a great statesman
and a consummate defender of his own political self interest" (p.
1). Brinkley shows that the New Deal policies encouraged the acceptance
of the big state but that in the postwar period, the war "helped
reduce enthusiasm for a powerful regulatory state and helped legitimize the idea of a primarily compensatory government" (p. 53).
Brinkley points to the multitude of forces that began with the
changes in belief gradually moving from liberalism to growing
conservatism of the Eisenhower administration. "Many factors
contributed to this wartime evolution of opinion," wrote Brinkley.
The political climate was changing rapidly. The Republicans had rebounded
in the 1938 and 1940 elections; conservatives had gained strength in
Congress; the public was displaying a growing antipathy toward the more
aggressive features of the New Deal and less animus against big business.
Liberals responded by lowering their sights and modifying their goals. (p.
53)
Other ideas mattered too--labor became less militant, and liberals
no longer admired the big state of the wartime totalitarian governments
in Europe. There was growing confidence too in the natural forces of the
economic market, again resulting in a moving away from paternalistic
programs. The Democratic Party itself became more conservative as
evidenced by the emergence of the Democratic solid South and the
policies of segregation, which were seen as unliberal.
Brinkley also illustrates the challenges to liberalism from the
Left such as the Students for Democratic Society, the hippie movement in
general, the New Left historians, Tom Hayden, and Al Harber. He also
develops the themes of the Radical Right and examines the growth of
religious fundamentalism with the story of people like Oral Roberts and
other evangelists. The evolution of a strong conservative tradition in
the postwar period evolved from Barry Goldwater, Friedrich Hayek, and
William F. Buckley, as Brinkley expounds in detail on their policies and
viewpoints.
Brinkley concluded that the evolution of liberalism as a philosophy
has undergone profound changes and challenges from the 1930s to the
1990s and that a history of the philosophies questioning and challenging
the basic tenets of liberalism are worth examining, if only to preserve
an accurate and multivisioned picture of history. He suggested that most
scholars themselves are liberals and therefore tend to write a narrower
history than reality calls for. He insists that the "popular memory
be balanced," a worthy goal for this book in itself and certainly
reason for reading his well-argued volume.
In contributing to the knowledge of the presidency, this book
contributes in two significant ways: it balances our views of the
presidents themselves relating details about the successes regardless of
party, and it offers detailed insight into historiographical issues
between the progressive, consensus, and New Left historians' views
on the presidents and their presidencies. The book suggests, too, that
fundamental changes in American opinion such as the change from liberal
to conservative periods are often accompanied or tied to similar social,
economic, and cultural factors such as poverty or prosperity.
BARBARA BENNETT PETERSON
Emeritus Professor University of Hawaii3