Authors:
Historic Era:
Historic Theme:
Subject:
November/December 2003 | Volume 54, Issue 6

        Authors:
Historic Era:
Historic Theme:
Subject:
November/December 2003 | Volume 54, Issue 6
 Twenty years ago our colleague Walter Karp helped  Walter detailed the process
 inaugurate and refine this magazine’s coverage of historical travel.
 Nobody was better than Walter
 at discovering and describing
 how the living essence of men
 and women could cling to a
 place long years after they themselves were gone. But Walter’s
 true passion was politics. When
 he died prematurely in 1989, the
 Republic lost an eloquent and
 tireless defender. That Republic,
 as Walter saw it, was the country
 of liberty-loving freeholders that
 had long been threatened by
 the insatiable corporate nationalism made possible by America’s rise to industrialprominence in the years after the Civil War.
 with scalding intensity in his
 1979 book  The Politics of War ,
 in which he charged that the men
 at the levers of power cynically
 brought on the Spanish-
 American conflict and then the
 nation’s entry into World War I
 to crush the stirrings of first the
 Populist and then the Progressive
 movements. The quotes that
 make up the chapter headings
 suggest the story, beginning with
 “The Eve of a Very Dark Night”
 and “The Malevolent Change in
 Our Public Life” and ending with
 “The Old America That Was Free
 and Is Now Dead.”  The Politics
 of War was a controversial
 book in its time, and it remains
 so today—as fresh and relevant
 now, writes Lewis Lapham in his
 introduction to the new edition
 just published by Franklin Square
 Press, as it was in the disheveled
 late seventies. But despite its
 somber message, the book never
 sounds gloomy, because it is
 buoyed throughout with Walter’s
 voice, bracing and high-hearted
 with his lifelong faith that the better angels of the American nature will always lead itschildren back to their founding freedoms.