In the popular imagination, opposition to the Vietnam War was driven largely by college students and elite intellectuals, while supposedly reactionary blue-collar workers largely supported the war effort. In Hardhats, Hippies, and Hawks, Penny Lewis challenges this collective memory of class polarization. Through close readings of archival documents, popular culture, and media accounts at the time, she offers a more accurate ‘counter-memory’ of a diverse, cross-class opposition to the war in Southeast Asia that included the labor movement, working-class students, soldiers and veterans, and Black Power, civil rights, and Chicano activists.Lewis investigates why the image of antiwar class division gained such traction at the time and has maintained such a hold on popular memory since. Identifying the primarily middle-class culture of the early antiwar movement, she traces how the class interests of its first organizers were reflected in its subsequent forms. The founding narratives of class-based political behavior, Lewis shows, were amplified in the late 1960s and early 1970s because the working class, in particular, lacked a voice in the public sphere, a problem that only increased in the subsequent period, even as working-class opposition to the war grew. By exposing as false the popular image of conservative workers and liberal elites separated by an unbridgeable gulf, Lewis suggests that shared political attitudes and actions are, in fact, possible between these two groups.
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Introduction1. Collective Memory of Vietnam Antiwar Sentiment and Protest Part I. The Antiwar Movement: A Liberal Elite? 2. Middle Class Cultures and the Movement’s Early Years3. Countercurrents in the Movement: Complicating the Class Base4. Countermemory I: ‘A Rich Man’s War and a Poor Man’s Fight’5. Countermemory II: GIs and Veterans Join the Movement Part II. Hardhat Hawks?: Working-Class Conservatism 6. Anticipation of the Class Divide7. Hardhats versus Elite Doves: Consolidation of the Image ConclusionNotes
Bibliography
Index
Mengenai Pengarang
Penny Lewis is Assistant Professor of Labor Studies at the Joseph S. Murphy Institute for Worker Education and Labor Studies, City University of New York.