Christopher Lasch

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Robert Christopher (Kit) Lasch (1932 - 1994)

Also Known As: "Kit"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Omaha, Douglas County, Nebraska, United States
Death: February 14, 1994 (61)
Pittsford, Monroe County, New York, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of Robert Nelson Lasch and Zora Lasch

Managed by: Tamás Flinn Caldwell-Gilbert
Last Updated:
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Immediate Family

About Christopher Lasch

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christopher_Lasch

Robert Christopher (Kit) Lasch (June 1, 1932 – February 14, 1994) was an American historian, moralist, and social critic.

Mentored by William Leuchtenburg at Columbia University, Lasch was a professor at the University of Rochester. Lasch sought to use history as a tool to awaken American society to the pervasiveness with which major institutions, public and private, were eroding the competence and independence of families and communities. He strove to create a historically informed social criticism that could teach Americans how to deal with rampant consumerism, proletarianization, and what he famously labeled the 'culture of narcissism.' His books, including The New Radicalism in America (1965), Haven in a Heartless World (1977), The Culture of Narcissism (1979), and The True and Only Heaven (1991), were widely discussed and reviewed. The Culture of Narcissism became a surprise best-seller and won the National Book Award in the category Current Interest (paperback).

Lasch was always a critic of liberalism, and a historian of liberalism's discontents, but over time his political perspective evolved dramatically. In the 1960s, he was a neo-Marxist and acerbic critic of Cold War liberalism. During the 1970s, he began to become a far more iconoclastic figure, fusing cultural conservatism with a Marxian critique of capitalism, and drawing on Freud-influenced critical theory to diagnose the ongoing deterioration that he perceived in American culture and politics. His writings during this period led him to be denounced by feminists and hailed by conservatives for his apparent defense of the traditional family. He eventually concluded that an often unspoken but pervasive faith in "Progress" tended to make Americans resistant to many of his arguments. In his last major works he explored this theme in depth, suggesting that Americans had much to learn from the suppressed and misunderstood Populist and artisan movements of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.

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Christopher Lasch's Timeline

1932
June 1, 1932
Omaha, Douglas County, Nebraska, United States
1994
February 14, 1994
Age 61
Pittsford, Monroe County, New York, United States