Abstract

This book is the best treatment of the best American Marxist philosopher-and the best philosopher to emerge from American slums. Young Sidney is essential reading for anyone interested in democratic theory and practice in America.---Cornel West A very detailed, and fascinating account of Hook's formative years . . . [a] first-rate contribution to the history of American leftist intellectual life.---Richard Rorty, Raritan Fascinating . . . well researched and packed with information.---Times Literary Supplement Succeeds in establishing the young Hook as a dedicated revolutionary Marxist.---Amos Perlmutter, Washington Times A brilliant, lucid portrait of a scholar, adversarial by temperament, who turned his extraordinary powers of analysis and polemic successively against capitalism, Stalinism, and the New Left.---Alan Wald, Monthly Review The best study of Hook's thought. . . . Supersedes all earlier treatments.---David A. Hollinger and Charles Capper, The American Intellectual Tradition A major contribution to our understanding of Hook and the American Marxist tradition. . . . Extremely insightful.---American Studies Persuasive. . . . Discovers not just a brilliant interpreter of Marx and the Russian Revolution, but a remarkable advocate and practitioner of the Americanization of Marxism.---In These Times Phelps's effort to uncover, explore, and analyze Hook's forgotten leftism must be judged unqualified success.---Left Penetrating, closely argued, and lucid. . . . An important contribution to the history of American radicalism in the 1930s.---Labor History One of the most controversial figures in the history of American philosophy, Sidney Hook was an intellectual street fighter, who began his career as a brilliant Marxist thinker and probably the greatest polemicist of [the 20th] century (Edward Shils) before breaking with the Communist Party in the late 1930s. Turning in his later years to allegiance with American conservatives including Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan, Hook is now widely known as intellectual father of the neoconservative movement.

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