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Michael Harrington

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Biography: Michael Harrington

The American political activist and educator Michael Harrington (1928-1989) was a tireless advocate of democratic socialism. He helped develop the War on Poverty conducted by Presidents Kennedy and Johnson.

Michael Harrington was born into a middle class family and educated at Holy Cross College (A.B., 1947), Yale Law School, and the University of Chicago (M.A., 1949). He was drawn to the political left early in his career, becoming a conscientious objector to the Korean War and serving as associate editor of a Christian anarchist publication, The Catholic Worker, in 1951-1952. Harrington soon converted to socialism and was one of its most eloquent voices for over 30 years. During that time he supported himself by writing, lecturing, and, after 1972, teaching at Queens College of the City University of New York, where he was a professor of political science.

He always managed to give prodigious amounts of time and energy to socialist activities. Among other things Harrington served as a delegate to international socialist bodies, conventions, and congresses; as chairman of the board of the League for Industrial Democracy; as chairman and co-chairman of the executive board of the Socialist Party; as chairman of the Democratic Socialist organizing committee, and as chairman of the resulting Democratic Socialists of America. He was active also in the American Civil Liberties Union and other organizations concerned with labor, poverty, civil rights, and civil liberties.

In these ways Harrington showed himself to be a worthy heir of Norman Thomas, his predecessor as chief spokesman for American social democracy. Like Thomas he tirelessly advocated fair and humane socio-economic policies. But, again like Thomas, he was constrained by his role in the political system. Outside the United States, even in democracies, socialists can rise to the top. But in America, owing to the movement's narrow base, they can only be marginal politically no matter how great their talents. Harrington, like his forebears, chose this road all the same out of a deep faith in socialist ideas and as a matter of principle. By keeping the democratic socialist tradition alive they insured that the American left would not consist solely of totalitarians. The cost of doing this is that socialists generally, and Harrington in particular, had to give up even the hope of exercising power. For men and women of their persuasion, only the Democratic Party holds out this possibility, and Harrington, though often a supporter of Democrats, never joined them.

Yet lacking power does not necessarily deprive one of influence, and Harrington acquired a good deal through his writings. Few authors can claim to have affected history. Harrington did this with his first book, The Other America: Poverty in the United States (1962). Written at a time when his fellow citizens were busy celebrating their country's affluence, The Other America had tremendous impact. In it he spoke up for what he called the "invisible poor": industrial rejects, migrant workers, minorities, and the aged. Harrington's book came to the attention of President John F. Kennedy. As Kennedy biographer Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr. explained it, the book "helped crystallize his determination in 1963 to accompany the tax cut (with) a poverty program." Kennedy died before his plan could be realized, but it was put into effect with impressive results by President Lyndon Johnson. If Harrington had done nothing else his place in history would be assured.

In fact, Harrington wrote a great deal more. His first book was followed in 1965 by The Accidental Century. Here he argued that the "accidental revolution" of the 20th century was the gap between technological progress and economic, social, and religious consciousness. A more ambitious book than The Other America, it sought to draw a complete picture of the defects in Western society that made socialism imperative. As with his previous book, Harrington was more interested in establishing the problem than arriving at solutions to it.

In his next book, Toward a Democratic Left (1968), Harrington addressed the question of how to bring about the good society. He called for a new political movement based on Black power, white youth, white collar labor unions, the new left, and religious groups. It seemed to Harrington, as to others at the time, that the elements for such a party already existed and needed only organization and leadership to become operational. Events, as usual, were against Harrington. The year 1968 witnessed not a new socialist or pre-socialist democracy, but the election of a conservative, Richard Nixon, and a setback to hopes of turning America leftward.

Of his later works, The Twilight of Capitalism (1976) is a critique based on his own revised version of Marxism. Some reviewers thought Harrington was a surefooted guide through treacherous political swamps. Sidney Hook, the foremost philosophical critic of Marxism, disagreed, maintaining that Harrington was out of his intellectual depth. In The Next America: The Decline and Rise of the United States (1981) Harrington attacked the new conservative mood, taking his customary view that America must go further left than was possible under New Deal liberalism. The Politics at God's Funeral (1983) argues that as God is dead man must henceforth rely upon democratic socialism. In making his familiar case Harrington continued to display the attributes that set him apart from most social critics. Though an apostate, he treated religion with great respect. Also, though a socialist he recognized that capitalism had shown a remarkable ability to reform itself, admitting that it had made great contributions to democracy.

Though some regarded his many books, articles, and speeches on behalf of his movement as fatiguing and irrelevant, no one doubts that Harrington is unmatched as a socialist champion. Even to his critics he never appeared to be anything less than decent and humane. His anti-Communism, which runs through all of Harrington's work, is in contrast to much of the writing by leftist intellectuals. Despite his professorship, Harrington was not a conventional scholar. He practiced what might be called the "higher journalism": a mixture of fact, analysis, and polemic. Few Americans have so successfully called attention to national shortcomings or raised more important questions. His books were coherent and well thought out. He took the reader seriously. His arguments were honestly made and did not distort or ignore inconvenient facts. Though his style wavered between the eloquent and the slipshod, as one reviewer put it, Harrington at his best was, in the words of another, "lucid, brilliant, and epigrammatic." As a political program socialism made little progress in America. But with spokesmen like Harrington it will remain a moral and intellectual force.

Harrington argued that his brand of socialism was essentially a highly modified Marxism which had been refined through the twentieth-century disasters of communism and various forms of state-sponsored socialism. His utopian socialist state would be similar to Sweden's recent experiments with worker-ownership and to some similar plans which have been undertaken in the United States as a consequence of bankruptcies and/or under-capitalization.

Michael Harrington was working on his final book and carrying a full load of academic and public lectures when he died of cancer in 1989.

Further Reading

Other books by Harrington include American Power in the Twentieth Century (1967), The Seventies: Problems and Proposals (1972), Fragments of the Century (1974), The Conservative Party (1974), The Vast Majority: A Journey to the World's Poor (1977), and The New American Poverty (1986). The best history is Daniel Bell, Marxian Socialism in the United States (1967).

Other books by Michael Harrington include Decade of Decision: The Crisis of the American System, New York: Simon & Schulster (1980); The Next Left: The History of a Future. New York: Henry Holt (1986); The Politics at God's Funeral: The Spiritual Crisis of Western Civilization: New York: Penguin Books (1983); Taking Sides: The Education of a Militant Mind. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston (1985); and Socialism: Past and Present. New York: Little, Brown (1989).

Other excellent secondary readings are Dorrien, Gary. The Vision of Michael Harrington. The Democratic Socialist Vision. Totowa, NJ: Rowman and Littlefield (1986), pp. 5, 98-135; and Dorrien, Gary, Editor. Leaders from the 1960s: A Biographical Sourcebook of American Activism, Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press (1994), pp. 517-522.

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US History Companion: Harrington, Michael
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(1928-1989), writer and political activist. The author of sixteen books and an indefatigable organizer, Harrington was the most prominent socialist in the United States from the 1960s until his death in 1989.

Harrington was born into a middle-class Irish Catholic family in St. Louis and was educated, through college, at Jesuit institutions. After brief stints as a law student at Yale, as a graduate student in English at the University of Chicago, and as a social worker in St. Louis, he commenced his activist career by joining the Catholic Worker organization in New York in 1951. Two years later, he left the Catholic church and the Catholic Worker movement but remained involved with progressive organizations, joining the anticommunist, civil libertarian Young Socialist League in 1954.

Throughout the following decade he was an active supporter of the civil rights and trade union movements, as well as other liberal and leftist causes. A member of the League for Industrial Democracy (an affiliate of the Socialist party), he became an adviser to Martin Luther King, Jr., in 1965 as well as an outspoken critic of the Vietnam War. Dismayed by the conservative drift of the Socialist party, Harrington resigned its national chairmanship in 1972 and a year later founded the Democratic Socialist Organizing Committee (dsoc), a group devoted to building a progressive coalition within the Democratic party. In 1981, dsoc merged with the New America Movement to form the Democratic Socialists of America, which, though small, became the largest socialist organization in the United States since the 1930s.

Harrington's best-known contribution to American politics was his book The Other America: Poverty in the United States (1962). This volume of statistics, straightforward analysis, and simply told narratives attracted an extraordinary amount of attention. Appearing at a time when most politicians and commentators were celebrating the achievements of the postwar American economy, the book argued that tens of millions of Americans remained desperately poor and trapped in a culture of poverty. Despite its capabilities, Harrington argued, the United States had not solved the problem of poverty; it was instead turning a blind eye to the large minority of Americans who remained poor. The attention the book received led to its being read by President John F. Kennedy and helped to prompt and shape the War on Poverty (which included an expansion of existing social programs as well as new initiatives in housing and health care) sponsored by the Kennedy and Johnson administrations. Harrington himself became a participant in a presidential antipoverty task force and a highly visible spokesman for liberal policies and programs.

Harrington also played an important role in unifying the American Left and shaping its policies during the decades that followed the McCarthy era. He served as something of a bridge between the Left of the 1930s and the New Left of the 1960s (although in 1962, in an act he later regretted, he bitterly denounced the founders of the Students for a Democratic Society for being insufficiently anticommunist). Similarly, he served as a point of contact and a channel of communication between Democratic party liberals, such as John and Robert Kennedy, and left-wing activists and organizers who were wary of mainstream politics. ("I want to be on the left wing of the possible," he once said.)

Although many disagreed with his political views, Harrington, over the course of decades, earned great respect, nationally and internationally, for his consistent championing of a socialism that included political democracy and civil liberties. His extraordinary energy, dedication to principles, and humane personal style rendered him an admired symbol of progressive politics even during the politically conservative decades of the 1970s and 1980s.

Bibliography:

Michael Harrington, The Long-Distance Runner: An Autobiography (1988) and The Other America: Poverty in the United States (1962).

Author:

Alexander Keyssar

See also Liberalism; New Left; Poverty; Socialism; Socialist Party.


Works: Works by Michael Harrington
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(1928-1989)

1962The Other America. Harrington's widely discussed study documents a poor underclass beneath the surface of American affluence. Called by reviewer A. H. Raskin "a scream of rage, a call to conscience," the book prompts President Kennedy to support increased federal assistance and would provide an impetus for Lyndon Johnson's War on Poverty in 1964. Harrington would revise his book in 1970 and issue another study, The New American Poverty, in 1984. Born in St. Louis, Harrington was the editor of New America (1961-1962) and a prominent advocate for democratic socialism.

Quotes By: Michael Harrington
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Quotes:

"Clothes make the poor invisible. America has the best-dressed poverty the world has ever known."

"That the poor are invisible is one of the most important things about them. They are not simply neglected and forgotten as in the old rhetoric of reform; what is much worse, they are not seen."

"If there is technological advance without social advance, there is, almost automatically, an increase in human misery, in impoverishment."

Wikipedia: Michael Harrington
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Michael Harrington

In office
1982 – 1989
Preceded by None

Born February 24, 1928
St. Louis, Missouri
Died July 31, 1989
Birth name Edward Michael Harrington
Nationality American
Political party Socialist Party of America
Spouse(s) Stephanie Gervis
Children Alexander Harrington
Occupation Politican
Author
Religion Atheist

Edward Michael "Mike" Harrington (February 24, 1928 — July 31, 1989) was an American democratic socialist, writer, political activist, professor of political science, radio commentator and founder of the Democratic Socialists of America.

Contents

Biography

Early life

Michael Harrington was born in St. Louis, Missouri on February 24, 1928. He attended St. Louis University High School, College of the Holy Cross, University of Chicago (MA in English Literature), and Yale Law School. As a young man, he was interested in both leftwing politics and Catholicism. Fittingly, he joined Dorothy Day's Catholic Worker movement, a pacifist group that advocated a radical interpretation of the Gospel. Above all else, Harrington was an intellectual. He loved arguing about culture and politics, preferably over beer, and his Jesuit education made him a fine debater and rhetorician. Harrington was an editor of The Catholic Worker from 1951 to 1953. However, Harrington became disillusioned with religion and, although he would always retain a certain affection for Catholic culture, he ultimately became an atheist.[1]

Becoming a socialist

This estrangement from religion was accompanied by a growing interest in Marxism and a drift toward secular socialism. After leaving The Catholic Worker Harrington became a member of the Independent Socialist League, a small organization associated with the former Trotskyist leader Max Shachtman. Harrington and Shachtman believed that socialism, the promise of a just and fully democratic society, could not be realized under authoritarian Communism and they were both fiercely critical of the "bureaucratic collectivist" states in Eastern Europe and elsewhere.

Harrington became a member of Norman Thomas's Socialist Party when the SP agreed to absorb Shachtman's organization. Harrington backed the Shachtmanite realignment strategy of working within the Democratic Party rather than running candidates on a Socialist ticket.[2]

Socialist leader

During this period Harrington wrote The Other America: Poverty in the United States, a book that had an impact on the Kennedy administration, and on Lyndon B. Johnson's subsequent War on Poverty. Harrington became a widely read intellectual and political writer. He would frequently debate noted conservatives but would also clash with the younger radicals in the New Left movements. He was present at the 1962 SDS conference that led to the creation of the Port Huron Statement, where he argued that the final draft was insufficiently anti-Communist. Arthur M. Schlesinger, Sr. referred to Harrington as the "only responsible radical" in America, a somewhat dubious distinction among those on the political left. His high profile landed him on the master list of Nixon political opponents.[3]

By early 1970s Shachtman's anti-Communism had become a hawkish Cold War liberalism. Shachtman and the governing faction of the Socialist Party effectively supported the Vietnam War and changed the organization's name to Social Democrats, USA. In protest Harrington led a number of Norman Thomas-era Socialists, younger activists and ex-Shachtmanites into the Democratic Socialist Organizing Committee. A smaller faction associated with peace activist David McReynolds formed the Socialist Party USA.

In the early 1980s The Democratic Socialist Organizing Committee merged with the New American Movement, an organization of New Left veterans, forming Democratic Socialists of America. This organization remains the principal U.S. affiliate of the Socialist International, which includes socialist parties as diverse as the Swedish and German Social Democrats, Nicaragua's FSLN, and the British Labour Party.[4]

Academician and public intellectual

Harrington was appointed a professor of political science at Queens College in 1972 and was designated a distinguished professor in 1988. During the 1980s he contributed commentaries to National Public Radio.[5] Harrington died on July 31, 1989 of cancer. He was the most well-known socialist in the United States during his lifetime.[6] In the 1970s he coined the term neoconservatism.[7]

Television appearances

  • Michael Harrington appeared as a guest speaker on the series Free to Choose. He sought to rebut some of Milton Friedman's theories of free market.

Books by Michael Harrington

See also

References

  1. ^ Maurice Isserman, The Other American: The Life of Michael Harrington (New York: Public Affairs, 2000), pp. 1-104.
  2. ^ Isserman, The Other American, pp. 105-174.
  3. ^ Isserman, The Other American, pp. 175-255; Michael Harrington, Fragments of the Century (1973).
  4. ^ Isserman, The Other American, pp. 256-363; Michael Harrington, The Long-Distance Runner (1988).
  5. ^ Scott Sherman, "Good, Gray NPR," The Nation, May 5, 2005.
  6. ^ Herbert Mitgang, "Michael Harrington, Socialist and Author, Is Dead," The New York Times, August 2, 1989, p. B10.
  7. ^ http://tangibleinfo.blogspot.com/2009/09/neocon-reshaped-america-straussian-pr.html

External links


 
 

Did you mean: Michael Harrington, Al Harrington (Basketball Player), Othella Harrington (Basketball Player), Joey Harrington (Detroit Lions), William Stanhope, 1st Earl of Harrington More...


 

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Biography. © 2006 through a partnership of Answers Corporation. All rights reserved.  Read more
US History Companion. The Reader's Companion to American History, Eric Foner and John A. Garraty, Editors, published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Works. The Chronology of American Literature, edited by Daniel S. Burt. Copyright © 2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Quotes By. Copyright © 2008 QuotationsBook.com. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Michael Harrington" Read more