American Committee for Cultural Freedom
The American Committee for Cultural Freedom (ACCF) was the U.S. affiliate of the anti-Communist Congress for Cultural Freedom (CCF).
Overview[]
The ACCF and CCF were organizations that, during the Cold War, sought to encourage intellectuals to be critical of the Soviet Union and Communism, and to combat, according to a writer for The New York Times, "the continuing strength of the Soviet myth among the Western cultural elite. Despite all that had happened - the Moscow show trials, the Nazi-Soviet pact, the assassination of Leon Trotsky, the Russian attack on Finland, the takeovers in Eastern Europe, the mounting evidence of the gulag - Joseph Stalin still retained the loyalty of many writers, artists and scientists who viewed the Soviet Union as a progressive alternative to the 'reactionary,' 'war-mongering' United States."[1] The CCF was funded by the CIA, as well as the ACCF (via the CIA officer James Burnham and front organizations like the National Committee for a Free Europe (NCFE).[2]
Members[]
The dominant figure in the organization was Sidney Hook. Its 600-strong membership encompassed leading figures on both the Right and the Left, some of whom included:
- Roger Baldwin
- Daniel Bell
- James Burnham
- Alexander Calder
- John Chamberlain
- Whittaker Chambers
- Elliot Cohen
- (chairman 1953–1954)[3]
- Moshe Decter
- John Dewey
- John Dos Passos
- Max Eastman
- James T. Farrell
- John Kenneth Galbraith
- Clement Greenberg
- Henry Hazlitt
- Sidney Hook
- Karl Jaspers
- Elia Kazan
- Irving Kristol
- Melvin J. Lasky
- Sol Levitas
- Dwight Macdonald
- Reinhold Niebuhr
- Mary McCarthy
- J. Robert Oppenheimer
- William Phillips
- Jackson Pollock
- David Riesman
- Elmer Rice
- James Rorty
- Richard Rovere
- Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr.
- George Schuyler
- Sol Stein
- Norman Thomas
- Diana Trilling
- James Wechsler
The committee's central or executive committee varied over time. James Burnham, who worked for the CIA, was a member until he left the group circa 1954.[4] Whittaker Chambers joined in late 1954 and was also a member of the executive committee.[5][6][7][8][9] Diana Trilling became chair person at some point.[10]
See also[]
- Congress for Cultural Freedom
- Anti-Communism
References[]
- ^ Cranky Integrity on the Left" in The New York Times (August 27, 1989)
- ^ Wilford, Hugh. The Mighty Wurlitzer.
- ^ "Robert G. Davis, 90, Author, Professor and Literary Critic". The New York Times. 17 July 1998. Retrieved 29 July 2017.
- ^ Smant, Kevin J. (1992). How Great the Triumph: James Burnham, Anti-Communism, and the Conservative Movement. University Press of America. p. 45.
- ^ Chambers, Whittaker (1987). Odyssey of a Friend (reprint ed.). Washington: Regnery. p. 229.
- ^ Navasky, Victor (2013). Naming Names. Open Road Media. ISBN 9781480436213.
- ^ Gollin, James (2001). Pied Piper: The Many Lives of Noah Greenberg. Pendragon Press. p. 143. ISBN 9781576470411.
- ^ Pells, Richard H. (1989). The Liberal Mind in a Conservative Age. Wesleyan University Press. p. 340. ISBN 9780819562258.
- ^ Ceplair, Larry (2011). Anti-communism in Twentieth-Century America. ABC-CLIO. p. 134. ISBN 9781440800481.
- ^ Haslett, Tobi (29 May 2017). "The Feuds of Diana Trilling". New Yorker. Retrieved 22 October 2017.
Sources[]
- Sidney Hook, Out of Step, Harper & Row, 1987.
- A Short History of the New York Intellectuals on PBS's Arguing the World
- American Institute of Physics
- Tamiment Library/Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives
- "Radical History" in The New Criterion (June 2002)
- "Revising the History of Cold War Liberals" in New Politics (Winter 2000)
- "The Mood of Three Generations" in The End of Ideology (2000)
- "Cranky Integrity on the Left" in The New York Times (August 27, 1989)
- Political organizations based in the United States
- Central Intelligence Agency front organizations