Christopher Lasch (June 1, 1932, Omaha, Nebraska - February 14, 1994, Pittsford, New York) was a well-known American historian and social critic. He studied at Harvard and Columbia and was a professor of history at the University of Rochester since 1970.
Lasch's books ranged across a broad cultural field, but a common theme was dissection of the extent to which radicals had become implicated in the assumptions of progress. This had led to "the Left" becoming implicated in professionalised roles supporting commoditised lifestyles which hollowed out communities' self-sustaining ethics. In his works (notably The True and Only Heaven) he sought out those points where alternative positions had seemed feasible for a time - positions sometimes dismissed under the label of "populism".
Journalist Susan Faludi claims that by the early 1990s Lasch had replaced George Gilder as the leading antifeminist intellectual, "castigating pro-choice women and calling for a constitutional ban on divorce for couples with children". (Backlash, 281) Lasch did, however, engage with feminist ideas in several of his books, beginning with 1984's The Minimal Self.
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