'It looks, sounds, and smells like 1968' (Fatih Aktas/Anadolu via Getty Images)

The barricades. The passion. The patchouli. A campus protest and student rebellion that threatens to engulf a tired establishment. This time round, the police used flash-bang grenades rather than tear gas to clear out Hamilton Hall. But this is a detail, not a difference, and the parallels between 1968 and 2024 on the Columbia University campus are obvious. The historical rhymes extend well beyond such surface symbolism. Outraged by racism and injustice at home, protesters have coalesced around a foreign war. Like the New Left before them, Zoomers refuse to be âGood Germansâ. More broadly, they oppose what to their minds is a racist, fascist, and imperialist system. Meanwhile, a bland Democratic institutionalist watches his re-election prospects wither. His wily, law-and-order foe senses opportunity.
It looks, sounds, and smells like 1968. And this is no coincidence â many of the protesters see themselves as revivalists, resurrecting the pose and the politics of a more heroic era. But a closer examination of the trajectory of the 1968 generation reveals the Columbia crop to be little more than a patchy historical shadow. Because while the 2024 generation are ultimately the grandchildren of 1968, they are also its epigones, and placing the two political movements side by side is an object lesson in the difference between the authentic and ersatz.
Mark Rudd, who led the 1968 Columbia University protests, was a typical New Leftist. He entered college from the mid-Sixties middle class â apolitical, yet vaguely jaundiced. He longed for an âintellectual avant-gardeâ. He had tired of watching the Civil Rights Movement unfold from the side-lines. He drifted in such frustrations until discovering Malcolm X who taught him that âthe division in the world is between the oppressedâwho are mainly people of colorâand the oppressorsâwho are mainly whiteâ. In a phrase, this is how Rudd and the New Leftists could link their domestic situation to Vietnam and American foreign policy.
This was key to turning the Civil Rights movement into a larger New Left. The batons, German shepherds, and firehoses that the racist South used as its weapons had already permanently changed how Rudd, and many in his generation, viewed their country. John Lewis, Diane Nash, and the student wing of the civil rights movement served as their activist model. Their villain was George Wallace, the segregationist Alabama governor, who was taken to define America at home. Once Vietnam was thrown into the mix, New Leftists could think of their nation as George Wallace home and abroad â racist, fascist, and irredeemably imperialist.
This 21st-century movement opts for a similar synthesis, tying their Gaza activism to their anti-racist background. Like the original New Left, the culture war over American society in the last decade has led them on a journey from racial optimism to remorseless antagonism. It began with Barack Obama, the Zoomer John Kennedy. Charismatic and cool, Obama symbolised an ascendant âpost-racialâ America when the nation could still believe in change through traditional political channels. But Trayvon Martinâs 2012 murder, Michael Brownâs 2014 shooting, and the Ferguson Riots began to punch holes in this fantasy before, like the Civil Rights movement in the Sixties, Donald Trumpâs election and George Floyd, radicalised a generation.
Once at college, the institutional pressures were there to bake these ingredients into a very 1968 mould: the 2024 student protesters sound and act like the New Left because they are trained by an institutionalised New Left at elite universities. This is why the intone the very same language and misapply identical principles. In 1968, Rudd founded his protest upon Columbiaâs âracism and support for imperialismâ. Now, 56 years later, Jawuanna McAllister a Cornell University student protester defines her philosophy: âweâre antiracist, anti-imperialist, anti-colonialistâĤ none of us can be freeâĤ unless all of us are freeâ. Itâs Freaky Friday â the student protest edition, except this time there is no generation gap on campus.
Join the discussion
Join like minded readers that support our journalism by becoming a paid subscriber
To join the discussion in the comments, become a paid subscriber.
Join like minded readers that support our journalism, read unlimited articles and enjoy other subscriber-only benefits.
Subscribe