Naming Names

Front Cover
Viking Press, 1980 - Performing Arts - 482 pages
"The moral issues that continue to haunt the Hollywood blacklist generation have never been fully explored. This book is the first serious attempt to capture the painful history of not only the blacklist's victims, but also the men and women who 'named names,' who cooperated with the 'degradation ceremonies' of congressional committees investigating Hollywood during the 1950s. Some of these people were influential and well known--Sterling Hayden, Lee J. Cobb, Elia Kazan, Budd Schulberg, Larry Parks; others, less famous, were caught equally in the vise of the times. Victor S. Navasky has unabashedly asked them--and their children, lawyers, therapists, and agents--why did they do what they did? His brilliant book about their answers is an extraordinary moral detective story. The subject is cold-war Hollywood, but Mr. Navasky goes far beyond that small town and brings the subject right up to the present. For the issues posed during this peculiar episode in American history continue to reverberate through many central aspects of American life and culture. What happens to a society when the state pressures its citizens to betray their fellows? Mr. Navasky's dramatic essay in the sociology of indignation--combining oral history, interviews, and research, from gossip columns to the literature of social psychology--traces the consequences of what he calls the state's adoption of the Informer Principle, according to which the informer became, for a brief and inglorious time, America's cultural hero and prophet."--Dust jacket.

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Contents

The Espionage Informer
6
The Conspiracy Informer
25
The Liberal Informer
45
Copyright

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