Review of 'The Year the Dream Died: Revisiting 1968 in America'
- By Bruce Watson
- Smithsonian magazine, June 1998, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
Yet what Witcover's account lacks in cultural context it atones for in a thoughtful epilogue on the year's aftermath. Witcover seems to have interviewed or read the memoirs of every major player. He also quotes current politicians, including Vice President Al Gore and House Speaker Newt Gingrich, who were in college during 1968. Deftly weaving conflicting opinions, he creates a forum on 1968's political repercussions.
Wrapping up this frightening year, Witcover leaves us with suppositions. What if the assassinations hadn't occurred? Could the dream have been kept alive? What if . . . What if . . . Those who remember and those who have only heard about 1968 should revisit it, if only to wonder how we survived it all and how it changed us. For through the lens of hindsight, the final word on 1968 is Winston Churchill's comment on another pivotal year. Speaking of 1914 and the outbreak of war, Churchill lamented, "The terrible Ifs accumulate."
Bruce Watson is based in Massachusetts.
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