Reflections on Republocrat: Oppression and the Left
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These reflections concern Carl Trueman’s Republocrat, Chapter 1. (For notes on the foreword and introduction, see A Serialized Review). Two questions were on my mind as I approached Chapter 1: (a) Is Trueman really a political liberal? (b) Does he accurately understand the conservatism he left behind?
Two themes comprise Chapter 1. Theme 1 is expressed in the chapter title, “Left Behind”: how those of “Old Left” (Trueman’s term) political views are now homeless because liberalism has been “hijacked by special interest groups” (p. 14). Theme 2 makes the first interesting: how Left thought about oppression developed from the 19th century to the present.
The chapter is divided into eight sections.
- (Introductory paragraphs, p.1-2)
- A Brief History of the Old Left (p. 2-5)
- The Strange Love Affair of the Intelligentsia with Marxism (p. 5-6)
- Success and Failure: the Road to Redefinition (p. 6-8)
- Mr. Marx Meets Dr. Freud: the Changing Face of Oppression (p. 9-11)
- How Authenticity Made the Left Inauthentic (p. 11-15)
- Evangelicals and the New Left (p. 15-17)
- Conclusion (p. 17-19)
Discussion