Wednesday, February 19, 2025

"Mastery & Drift": Essays on Liberal Professionals since the Sixties

The University of Chicago Press has just published Mastery and Drift: Professional Class Liberals Since the 1960s, edited by Brent Cebul and Lily Geismer.  Several contributions are of interest to legal historians, including “Creating ‘Initiatory Democracy’: Ralph Nader, the Center for the Study of Responsive Law, and the Shaping of Liberalism in the 1970s,” by Sarah Milov and Reuel Schiller.

Since the 1960s, American liberalism and the Democratic Party have been remade along professional class lines, widening liberalism’s impact but narrowing its social and political vision. In Mastery and Drift, historians Brent Cebul and Lily Geismer have assembled a group of scholars to address the formation of “professional-class liberalism” and its central role in remaking electoral politics and the practice of governance. Across subjects as varied as philanthropy, consulting, health care, welfare, race, immigration, economics, and foreign conflicts, the authors examine not only the gaps between liberals’ egalitarian aspirations and their approaches to policymaking but also how the intricacies of contemporary governance have tended to bolster professional-class liberals’ power.

The contributors to Mastery and Drift all came of age amid the development of professional-class liberalism, giving them distinctive and important perspectives in understanding its internal limitations and its relationship to neoliberalism and the Right. With never-ending disputes over the meaning of liberalism, the content of its governance, and its relationship to a resurgent Left, now is the time to consider modern liberalism’s place in contemporary American life.

--Dan Ernst