Red Hunting in the Promised Land: Anti-communism and the Making of America.

AuthorKnoll, Erwin

Joel Kovel, the Alger Hiss professor of social studies at Bard College, brings an original and ingenious perspective to the history of the American Left in Red Hunting in the Promised Land: Anticommunism and the Making of America (Basic Books. 331 pages. $25.00), though his book is not so much about the Left as about efforts to suppress it. Kovel set out to discover "why this nation, of all the capitalist powers the least threatened by Communism, has been the most floridly anticommunist."

Kovel concedes that "Communism failed, both in the United States and in the world at large, for intrinsic reasons as well as because of what was done to it," but his focus is on what was done to it and why. His thesis is that there was never a "Soviet menace" that actually imperiled the United States, or an internal threat of the kind conjured up by generations of rightwingers. Rather, he posits a mythic persecution of vulnerable outsiders that dates back to the beginnings of the American experience, and that directly relates persecution of minorities to persecution of political dissidents.

"Black Americans," Kovel writes, "were considered basically subhuman animals while Native Americans became the inhuman devils (a beast, too, though of the apocalypse) flitting through the wilderness beyond the city upon the hill; two nightmares as yet undigestible by the dominant culture, the one sedimenting into white racism, the other into anticommunism."

In a brief review, I can't begin to do justice to the intricate connections Kovel...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT