UC Press logo



Cover Image
California eNews

History titles
United States History titles
Politics titles
eMail:

This title is on sale!
view cart

Edited by Neil Jumonville and Kevin Mattson

Liberalism for a New Century

Buy Hardcover
$50.00, £29.95 hardcover
$6.95 hardcover on sale
(*May not have a dust jacket)
978-0-520-24919-6
Available Now
Buy Paperback
$19.95, £11.95 paperback
$5.95 paperback on sale
978-0-520-25071-0
Available Now
Enter a discount source code on the shopping cart page to buy at sale price.

*Sale prices are only available in the United States and Canada.

Sale Home | How do I get a discount source code?
270 pages, 6 x 9 inches,
June 2007, Available worldwide
Categories: History; United States History; Politics

"Consistently instructive."—Commonweal

"Anyone interested in keeping liberalism relevant will find much enlightenment and encouragement in these strong, well-focused pieces."—Publishers Weekly: Nonfiction

"The Mattson/Jumonville collection, here, is recommended not only to all liberals, but to anyone who takes political ideas seriously. While raising plenty of problems, it represents a mini-renaissance in liberal intellectual thinking." —Mediamatters/altercation
"Here, finally, the collection we've been waiting for—thoughtful and lively essays on the relevance of liberalism for this new century, by some of its keenest observers."—Robert B. Reich, Professor of Public Policy, University of California, Berkeley
American liberalism today is in a state of confusion and disarray, with the "L word" widely considered a term of derision. By examining both the historical past and the fractious present, Liberalism for a New Century restores a proud political tradition and carves out a formidable defense of its philosophical tenets. This manifesto for a New Liberalism issues an urgent and cogent call for the most important rethinking of its values since the late 1960s, when conservatives reenergized themselves after Barry Goldwater's infamous loss.

The essays in this volume, most of them never before published, are written by a leading group of historians, journalists, and public intellectuals. Some of the nation's most highly respected liberal minds explore such topics as the classical liberal tradition, postmodernism's challenge to the American "Enlightenment," the civil rights era, the influence of twentieth-century radicals on American liberalism, the 1950s, tolerance, the cold war, and whether liberalism should have a large and aggressive vision. One essay considers liberalism in Iran and what American liberals might learn from this movement. Fast-paced and encompassing such hot-button issues as the family and religion, here are ringside-seat arguments between people who don't often get to engage with one another: right-leaning liberals like Peter Berkowitz and John Patrick Diggins, and leftier liberals like Michael Tomasky and Mona Harrington. The result is a lively and stimulating collection that articulates a clear-minded alternative to the conservative ascendancy in American history and offers a timely and essential contribution to the growing national debate.

Foreword, E.J. Dionne Jr.
Introduction: Liberalism, Past and Future Tense
Neil Jumonville and Kevin Mattson

PART I: THE PHILOSOPHY OF LIBERALISM
PART II: LIBERALISM AND AMERICAN VALUES
PART III: LIBERALISM AND AMERICAN POWER

Notes
List of Contributors
Index
Neil Jumonville is William Warren Rogers Professor of History at Florida State University. Kevin Mattson is Connor Study Professor of Contemporary History at Ohio University.