Norman Podhoretz

American neoconservative pundit (born 1930)

Norman Podhoretz (/pɒdˈhɔːrɪts/; born January 16, 1930) is an American magazine editor, writer, and political commentator who identifies his views as "paleo-neoconservative". He is a contributor to Commentary magazine, and served as the publication's editor-in-chief from 1960 to 1995.

Norman Podhoretz in 1986

Quotes edit

  • Our culture is ill-equipped to assert the bourgeois values which would be the salvation of the under-class, because we have lost those values ourselves.
    • Daily Mail 10 November 1989; as quoted from: The new Penguin dictionary of modern quotations, p. 345

Quotes about Podhoretz edit

  • Ginsberg turned out to be depressingly prescient when, after a heated argument with Norman Podhoretz in 1958, he yelled, 'We'll get you through your children!' For countless American families, that turned out to be only too true.
    • Roger Kimball, The Long March: How the Cultural Revolution of the 1960s Changed America (2000), San Francisco: Encounter Books.
  • Like the medieval heretics that Norm Cohn wrote about in The Pursuit of the Millennium, the Beats cultivated an extreme narcissism that bordered on self-deification and that 'liberated them from all restraints' and allowed them to experience every impulse as a 'divine command'. What Norman Podhoretz observed of Ginsberg was also true of the Beats generally: they 'conjured up a world of complete freedom from the limits imposed by [bourgeois] responsibilities'. Podhoretz added, 'It was a world that promised endless erotic possibility together with the excitements of an expanded consciousness constantly open to new dimensions of being: more adventure, more sex, more intensity, more life'. Alas, the promise was illusory. Instead of an 'expanded consciousness', the Beats purchased madness, ruination, and, for many, an early death. Their attack on bourgeois responsibility led not to greater freedom but to greater chaos. The erotic paradise they envisioned turned out to be rife with misery.
    • Roger Kimball, The Long March: How the Cultural Revolution of the 1960s Changed America (2000), San Francisco: Encounter Books.

External links edit

 
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